Chaperone Proteins Abrogate Inhibition of the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) E1 Replicative Helicase by the HPV E2 Protein
Open Access
- 1 September 2002
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 22 (18) , 6592-6604
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.22.18.6592-6604.2002
Abstract
Human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA replication requires the viral origin recognition protein E2 and the presumptive viral replicative helicase E1. We now report for the first time efficient DNA unwinding by a purified HPV E1 protein. Unwinding depends on a supercoiled DNA substrate, topoisomerase I, single-stranded-DNA-binding protein, and ATP, but not an origin. Electron microscopy revealed completely unwound molecules. Intermediates contained two single-stranded loops emanating from a single protein complex, suggesting a bidirectional E1 helicase which translocated the flanking DNA in an inward direction. We showed that E2 protein partially inhibited DNA unwinding and that Hsp70 or Hsp40, which we reported previously to stimulate HPV-11 E1 binding to the origin and promote dihexameric E1 formation, apparently displaced E2 and abolished inhibition. Neither E2 nor chaperone proteins were detected in unwinding complexes. These results suggest that chaperones play important roles in the assembly and activation of a replicative helicase in higher eukaryotes. An E1 mutation in the ATP binding site caused deficient binding and unwinding of origin DNA, indicating the importance of ATP binding in efficient helicase assembly on the origin.Keywords
This publication has 110 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human Cdc7-related Kinase ComplexJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- HeLa Cells Are Phenotypically Limiting in Cyclin E/CDK2 for Efficient Human Papillomavirus DNA ReplicationPublished by Elsevier ,2000
- Biochemical and Electron Microscopic Image Analysis of the Hexameric E1 HelicasePublished by Elsevier ,1999
- Human Papillomavirus DNA ReplicationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1999
- DnaJ/hsp40 chaperone domain of SV40 large T antigen promotes efficient viral DNA replication.Genes & Development, 1997
- Characterization of the helicase and ATPase activity of human papillomavirus type 6b E1 proteinJournal of General Virology, 1996
- Activation of BPV-1 replication in vitro by the transcription factor E2Nature, 1991
- Targeting the E1 Replication Protein to the Papillomavirus Origin of Replication by Complex Formation with the E2 TransactivatorScience, 1990
- ATP-dependent assembly of double hexamers of SV40 T antigen at the viral origin of DNA replicationNature, 1989
- Unwinding of Duplex DNA from the SV40 Origin of Replication by T AntigenScience, 1987