Mutagenesis of the coxsackie B3 virus 2B/2C cleavage site: determinants of processing efficiency and effects on viral replication.

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RESUMO

The enterovirus 2B/2C cleavage site differs from the common cleavage site motif AxxQ/G by the occurrence of either polar residues at the P1' position or large aliphatic residues at the P4 position. To study (i) the putative contribution of these aberrant residues to the stability of precursor protein 2BC, (ii) the determinants of cleavage site specificity and efficiency of 3Cpro, and (iii) the importance of efficient cleavage at this site for viral replication, a mutational analysis of the coxsackie B3 virus (CBV3) 2B/2C cleavage site (AxxQ/N) was performed. Neither replacement of the P1' asparagine with a serine or a glycine nor replacement of the P4 alanine with a valine significantly affected 2B/2C cleavage efficiency, RNA replication, or virus growth. The introduction of a P4 asparagine, as can be found at the CBV3 3C/3D cleavage site, caused a severe reduction in 2B/2C cleavage and abolished virus growth. These data support the idea that a P4 asparagine is an unfavorable residue that contributes to a slow turnover of precursor protein 3CD but argue that it is unlikely that the aberrant 2B/2C cleavage site motifs serve to regulate 2B/2C processing efficiency and protein 2BC stability. The viability of a double mutant containing a P4 asparagine and a P1' glycine demonstrated that a P1' residue can compensate for the adverse effects of an unfavorable P4 residue. Poliovirus (or poliovirus-like) 2B/2C cleavage site motifs were correctly processed by CBV 3Cpro, albeit with a reduced efficiency, and yielded viable viruses. Analysis of in vivo protein synthesis showed that mutant viruses containing poorly processed 2B/2C cleavage sites were unable to completely shut off cellular protein synthesis. The failure to inhibit host translation coincided with a reduced ability to modify membrane permeability, as measured by the sensitivity to the unpermeant translation inhibitor hygromycin B. These data suggest that a critical level of protein 2B or 2C, or both, may be required to alter membrane permeability and, possibly as a consequence, to shut off host cell translation.

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