E1 protein of human papillomavirus is a DNA helicase/ATPase.

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RESUMO

Replication of human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA requires the viral proteins E1 and E2. Amino acid similarities to SV40 large-T antigen had suggested that E1 is a DNA helicase/ATPase involved in initiating viral DNA replication, and this has recently been shown for bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV-1) E1 protein. However, in vitro analysis of HPV E1 has been hampered by the inability to produce purified protein using heterologous expression systems. We have succeeded in demonstrating ATPase and DNA helicase activities in purified HPV E1, expressed in E. coli as a maltose-binding protein fusion (MBP-E1), for the first time. As further confirmation that the ATPase and DNA helicase activities are due to E1 and not contaminating E. coli enzymes, we have shown that a fusion protein containing an amino acid change (E1 Pro-479 to Ser), predicted to inactivate ATP-binding, has impaired activities. We have carried out a structure prediction analysis which suggests that E1 may form two domains: a relatively open N-terminal domain (residues 1-125), and a highly structured C-terminal domain (170-649), with an intermediate region (125-170) predicted to form an inter-domain linker. This is consistent with the proteolytic susceptibility of MBP-E1 at a site 15-20 kD from the N-terminus of E1, and the accumulation of a 58 kD C-terminal fragment of E1. We speculate that the N-terminal domain is involved in DNA-binding, while the C-terminal 58 kD may constitute a distinct enzymatic domain. HPV E1 is of interest as a therapeutic target and the availability of pure enzyme will be invaluable in the search for antiviral compounds.

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