Ruvolo Vivian, Sun Liang, Howard Karilynn, Sung Seung, Delecluse Henri-Jacques, Hammerschmidt Wolfgang, Swaminathan Sankar
Shands Cancer Center, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32610-0232, USA.
J Virol. 2004 Jan;78(1):340-52. doi: 10.1128/jvi.78.1.340-352.2004.
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) SM protein is a posttranscriptional regulator of cellular and viral gene expression that binds and stabilizes target mRNAs and shuttles from nucleus to cytoplasm. SM enhances expression of several EBV genes required for lytic replication and is essential for virion production. SM increases accumulation of specific mRNAs but also inhibits expression of several intron-containing transcripts. The mechanism by which SM inhibits gene expression is poorly understood. The experiments described here had several aims: to determine whether specific domains of SM were responsible for activation or inhibition function; whether these functions could be separated; and whether one or more of these functions were essential for virion production. A mutational analysis of SM was performed, focusing on amino acids in SM that are evolutionarily conserved among SM homologs in other herpesviruses. Mutation of the carboxy-terminal region of SM revealed a region that is likely to be structurally important for SM protein conformation. In addition, several amino acids were identified that are critical for activation and inhibition function. A specific mutation of a highly conserved cysteine residue revealed that it was essential for gene inhibition but not for transactivation, indicating that these two functions operate through independent mechanisms. Furthermore, the ability of wild-type SM and the inability of the mutant to inhibit gene expression were shown to correlate with the ability to inhibit splicing of a human target gene and thereby prevent accumulation of its processed mRNA. Surprisingly, some mutations which preserved both activation and inhibition functions in vitro nevertheless abolished virion production, suggesting that other SM functions or protein-protein interactions are also required for lytic replication.
爱泼斯坦-巴尔病毒(EBV)的SM蛋白是一种细胞和病毒基因表达的转录后调节因子,它能结合并稳定靶标mRNA,并在细胞核与细胞质之间穿梭。SM增强了裂解复制所需的几种EBV基因的表达,对病毒粒子的产生至关重要。SM增加了特定mRNA的积累,但也抑制了几种含内含子转录本的表达。SM抑制基因表达的机制尚不清楚。本文所述的实验有几个目的:确定SM的特定结构域是否负责激活或抑制功能;这些功能是否可以分开;以及这些功能中的一个或多个对病毒粒子的产生是否至关重要。对SM进行了突变分析,重点关注在其他疱疹病毒的SM同源物中进化保守的SM氨基酸。SM羧基末端区域的突变揭示了一个可能对SM蛋白构象具有重要结构意义的区域。此外,还鉴定出了几个对激活和抑制功能至关重要的氨基酸。一个高度保守的半胱氨酸残基的特定突变表明,它对基因抑制至关重要,但对反式激活不重要,这表明这两种功能通过独立的机制发挥作用。此外,野生型SM抑制基因表达的能力和突变体无法抑制基因表达的情况与抑制人类靶标基因的剪接从而阻止其加工后mRNA积累的能力相关。令人惊讶的是,一些在体外保留了激活和抑制功能的突变却消除了病毒粒子的产生,这表明裂解复制还需要其他SM功能或蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用。