Effects of Mutations in the Adenoviral E1B 55-Kilodalton Protein Coding Sequence on Viral Late mRNA Metabolism
Open Access
- 1 May 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 76 (9) , 4507-4519
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.76.9.4507-4519.2002
Abstract
The human subgroup C adenoviral E1B 55-kDa protein cooperates with the viral E4 Orf6 protein to induce selective export of viral, late mRNAs from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Previous studies have suggested that such preferential transport of viral mRNA and the concomitant inhibition of export of cellular mRNAs are the result of viral colonization of specialized microenvironments within the nucleus. However, neither the molecular basis of this phenomenon nor the mechanism by which the E1B 55-kDa protein acts has been elucidated. We therefore examined viral late mRNA metabolism in HeLa cells infected with a series of mutant viruses that carry insertions at various positions in the E1B protein coding sequence (P. R. Yew, C. C. Kao, and A. J. Berk, Virology 179:795-805, 1990). All the mutations examined impaired cytoplasmic accumulation of viral L2 mRNAs and reduced L2 mRNA export efficiency. However, in most cases these defects could be ascribed to reduced E1B 55-kDa protein concentration or the unexpected failure of the altered E1B proteins to enter the nucleus efficiently. The latter property, the pleiotropic defects associated with all the mutations that impaired nuclear entry of the E1B protein, and consideration of its primary sequence suggest that these insertions result in misfolding of the protein. Insertion of four amino acids at residue 143 also inhibited viral mRNA export but resulted in increased rather than decreased accumulation of the E1B 55-kDa protein in the nucleus. This mutation specifically impaired the previously described association of the E1B protein with intranuclear structures that correspond to sites of adenoviral DNA replication and transcription (D. Ornelles and T. Shenk, J. Virol. 65:424-439, 1991) and the colocalization of the E1B and E4 Orf6 proteins. As this insertion has been shown to inhibit the interaction of the E1B with the E4 Orf6 protein in infected cell extracts (S. Rubenwolf, H. Schütt, M. Nevels, H. Wolf, and T. Dobner, J. Virol. 71:1115-1123, 1997), these phenotypes provide direct support for the hypothesis that selective viral mRNA export is determined by the functional organization of the infected cell nucleus.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analyses of Single-Amino-Acid Substitution Mutants of Adenovirus Type 5 E1B-55K ProteinJournal of Virology, 2001
- The large E1B protein together with the E4orf6 protein target p53 for active degradation in adenovirus infected cellsOncogene, 1998
- Nuclear Organization of Adenovirus RNA BiogenesisExperimental Cell Research, 1996
- Spliced exons of adenovirus late RNAs colocalize with snRNP in a specific nuclear domain.The Journal of cell biology, 1996
- Selective effects on adenovirus late gene expression of deleting the E1b 55K proteinJournal of General Virology, 1993
- Nuclear targeting sequences — a consensus?Trends in Biochemical Sciences, 1991
- How proteins move across the endoplasmic reticulum membraneHepatology, 1987
- Chromatin structure, DNA synthesis and transcription through the lifespan of human embryonic lung fibroblastsExperimental Cell Research, 1984
- The Kinetics of Synthesis of Early Viral Proteins in KB Cells Infected with Wild-type and Transformation-defective Host-range Mutants of Human Adenovirus Type 5Journal of General Virology, 1984
- Studies on the Phosphorylation of the 58000 Dalton Early Region 1B Protein of Human Adenovirus Type 5Journal of General Virology, 1983