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Identification of a Novel C-Terminal Cleavage of Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus PreG N That Leads to Generation of an NS M Protein
Author(s) -
Louis A. Altamura,
Andrea Bertolotti-Ciarlet,
Jeffrey E. Teigler,
Jason Paragas,
Connie S. Schmaljohn,
Robert W. Doms
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.617
H-Index - 292
eISSN - 1070-6321
pISSN - 0022-538X
DOI - 10.1128/jvi.02730-06
Subject(s) - orthobunyavirus , biology , cleavage (geology) , bunyaviridae , polyproteins , microbiology and biotechnology , transmembrane domain , peptide sequence , amino acid , virus , virology , protease , biochemistry , gene , enzyme , paleontology , fracture (geology)
The structural glycoproteins of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV; genusNairovirus , familyBunyaviridae ) are derived through endoproteolytic cleavage of a 1,684-amino-acid M RNA segment-encoded polyprotein. This polyprotein is cotranslationally cleaved into the PreGN and PreGC precursors, which are then cleaved by SKI-1 and a SKI-1-like protease to generate the N termini of GN and GC , respectively. However, the resulting polypeptide defined by the N termini of GN and GC is predicted to be larger (58 kDa) than mature GN (37 kDa). By analogy to the topologically similar M segment-encoded polyproteins of viruses in theOrthobunyavirus genus, the C-terminal region of PreGN that contains four predicted transmembrane domains may also contain a nonstructural protein, NSM . To characterize potential PreGN C-terminal cleavage events, a panel of epitope-tagged PreGN truncation and internal deletion mutants was developed. These constructs allowed for the identification of a C-terminal endoproteolytic cleavage within, or very proximal to, the second predicted transmembrane domain following the GN ectodomain and the subsequent generation of a C-terminal fragment. Pulse-chase experiments showed that PreGN C-terminal cleavage occurred shortly after synthesis of the precursor and prior to generation of the GN glycoprotein. The resulting fragment trafficked to the Golgi compartment, the site of virus assembly. Development of an antiserum specific to the second cytoplasmic loop of PreGN allowed detection of cell-associated NSM proteins derived from transient expression of the complete CCHFV M segment and also in the context of virus infection.

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