Orthopoxvirus fusion inhibitor glycoprotein SPI-3 (open reading frame K2L) contains motifs characteristic of serine proteinase inhibitors that are not required for control of cell fusion.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

The cowpox virus (CPV) SPI-3 gene (open reading frame K2L in vaccinia virus) is one of three orthopoxvirus genes whose products are members of the serpin (serine proteinase inhibitor) superfamily. The CPV SPI-3 gene, when overexpressed by using the vaccinia virus/T7 expression system, synthesized two proteins of 50 and 48 kDa. Treatment with the N glycosylation inhibitor tunicamycin converted the two SPI-3 proteins to a single 40-kDa protein, close to the size of 42 kDa predicted from the DNA sequence, suggesting that the SPI-3 protein, unlike the other two orthopoxvirus serpins, is a glycoprotein. Immunoblotting with an anti-SPI-3 antibody showed that the SPI-3 protein is synthesized early in infection prior to DNA replication. SPI-3 inhibits cell-cell fusion during infections with both CPV and vaccinia virus. A transfection assay was devised to test engineered mutants of SPI-3 for the ability to inhibit fusion. Two mutants with C-terminal deletions of 156 and 70 amino acids were completely inactive in fusion inhibition. Site-directed mutations were constructed near the C terminus of SPI-3, in or near the predicted reactive-site loop which is conserved in inhibitory serpins. Substitutions within the loop at the P1 to P1' positions and P5 to P5' positions, inclusive, did not result in any loss of activity, nor did changes at the P17 to P10 residues in the stalk of the reactive loop. Therefore, SPI-3 does not appear to control cell fusion by acting as a serine proteinase inhibitor.

Documentos Relacionados