Open Access
Characterization of Self-Processing Activities and Substrate Specificities of Porcine Torovirus 3C-Like Protease
Author(s) -
Shangen Xu,
Junwei Zhou,
Yingjin Chen,
Xue Tong,
Zixin Wang,
Jiahui Guo,
Jiyao Chen,
Liurong Fang,
Dan Wang,
Shaobo Xiao
Publication year - 2020
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.01282-20
Subject(s) - polyproteins , biology , protease , glutamine , biochemistry , active site , stereochemistry , enzyme , amino acid , chemistry
The 3C-like protease (3CL pro ) of nidovirus plays an important role in viral replication and manipulation of host antiviral innate immunity, which makes it an ideal antiviral target. Here, we characterized that porcine torovirus (PToV; family Tobaniviridae , order Nidovirales ) 3CL pro autocatalytically releases itself from the viral precursor protein by self-cleavage. Site-directed mutagenesis suggested that PToV 3CL pro , as a serine protease, employed His53 and Ser160 as the active-site residues. Interestingly, unlike most nidovirus 3CL pro , the P1 residue plays a less essential role in N-terminal self-cleavage of PToV 3CL pro Substituting either P1 or P4 residue of substrate alone has little discernible effect on N-terminal cleavage. Notably, replacement of the two residues together completely blocks N-terminal cleavage, suggesting that N-terminal self-cleavage of PToV 3CL pro is synergistically affected by both P1 and P4 residues. Using a cyclized luciferase-based biosensor, we systematically scanned the polyproteins for cleavage sites and identified (FXXQ↓A/S) as the main consensus sequences. Subsequent homology modeling and biochemical experiments suggested that the protease formed putative pockets S1 and S4 between the substrate. Indeed, mutants of both predicted S1 (D159A, H174A) and S4 (P62G/L185G) pockets completely lost the ability of cleavage activity of PToV 3CL pro In conclusion, the characterization of self-processing activities and substrate specificities of PToV 3CL pro will offer helpful information for the mechanism of nidovirus 3C-like proteinase's substrate specificities and the rational development of the antinidovirus drugs. IMPORTANCE Currently, the active-site residues and substrate specificities of 3C-like protease (3CL pro ) differ among nidoviruses, and the detailed catalytic mechanism remains largely unknown. Here, porcine torovirus (PToV) 3CL pro cleaves 12 sites in the polyproteins, including its N- and C-terminal self-processing sites. Unlike coronaviruses and arteriviruses, PToV 3CL pro employed His53 and Ser160 as the active-site residues that recognize a glutamine (Gln) at the P1 position. Surprisingly, mutations of P1-Gln impaired the C-terminal self-processing but did not affect N-terminal self-processing. The "noncanonical" substrate specificity for its N-terminal self-processing was attributed to the phenylalanine (Phe) residue at the P4 position in the N-terminal site. Furthermore, a double glycine (neutral) substitution at the putative P4-Phe-binding residues (P62G/L185G) abolished the cleavage activity of PToV 3CL pro suggested the potential hydrophobic force between the PToV 3CL pro and P4-Phe side chains.