scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Proteolytic cleavage of the E2 glycoprotein of murine coronavirus: activation of cell-fusing activity of virions by trypsin and separation of two different 90K cleavage fragments.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The cell-fusing activity of a coronavirus required proteolytic cleavage of the E2 glycoprotein, either by the addition of a protease to virions or by cellular proteases acting on E2, which was transported to the plasma membrane during virus maturation.
Abstract
In the murine coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus, a single glycoprotein, E2, is required both for attachment to cells and for cell fusion. Cell fusion induced by infection with mouse hepatitis virus strain A59 was inhibited by the addition of monospecific anti-E2 antibody after virus adsorption and penetration. Adsorption of concentrated coronavirions to uninfected cells did not cause cell fusion in the presence of cycloheximide. Thus, cell fusion was induced by E2 on the plasma membrane of infected 17 Cl 1 cells but not by E2 on virions grown in these cells. Trypsin treatment of virions purified from 17 Cl 1 cells quantitatively cleaved 180K E2 to 90K E2 and activated cell-fusing activity of the virions. This proteolytic cleavage yielded two different 90K species which were separable by sodium dodecyl sulfate-hydroxyapatite chromatography. One of the trypsin cleavage products, 90A, was acylated and may be associated with the lipid bilayer. The other, 90B, was not acylated and yielded different peptides than did 90A upon limited digestion with thermolysin or staphylococcal V8 protease. Thus, the cell-fusing activity of a coronavirus required proteolytic cleavage of the E2 glycoprotein, either by the addition of a protease to virions or by cellular proteases acting on E2, which was transported to the plasma membrane during virus maturation. There is a striking functional similarity between the E2 glycoprotein of coronavirus, which is a positive-strand RNA virus, and the hemagglutinin glycoprotein of negative-strand orthomyxoviruses, in that a single glycoprotein has both attachment and protease-activated cell-fusing activities.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

The molecular biology of coronaviruses.

TL;DR: This review summarizes both classical and contemporary discoveries in the study of the molecular biology of these infectious agents, with particular emphasis on the nature and recognition of viral receptors, viral RNA synthesis, and the molecular interactions governing virion assembly.
Book ChapterDOI

The molecular biology of coronaviruses

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the manipulation of clones of coronav virus and of complementary DNAs of defective-interfering RNAs to study coronavirus RNA replication, transcription, recombination, processing and transport of proteins, virion assembly, identification of cell receptors for coronaviruses, and processing of the polymerase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host cell proteases: Critical determinants of coronavirus tropism and pathogenesis

TL;DR: This review focuses on the diversity of strategies coronaviruses have evolved to proteolytically activate their fusion protein during spike protein biosynthesis and the critical entry step of their life cycle, and highlights important findings on how proteolytic activation of coronavirus spike influences tissue and cell tropism, host range and pathogenicity.
Book ChapterDOI

Chapter 4 - Coronavirus Pathogenesis

TL;DR: This review focuses primarily on the pathogenesis of murine coronav virus mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) and severe acute respiratory coronavirus (SARS-CoV), which provides models systems for the study of viral tropism and pathogenesis in several organs systems.
Book ChapterDOI

Virus entry into animal cells.

TL;DR: In order to take up nutrients, to communicate with other cells, to control the intracellular ion balance, and to secrete substances, cells have a variety of mechanisms for bypassing and modifying the barrier properties imposed by their plasma membrane.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of biological activities of paramyxovirus glycoproteins. Activation of cell fusion, hemolysis, and infectivity of proteolytic cleavage of an inactive precursor protein of Sendai virus.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the small glycoprotein of paramyxoviruses is biologically active and is involved in virus-induced hemolysis, cell fusion, and the initiation of infection, and provides a biochemical basis for previously observed host-dependent variation in infectivity, and in hemolyzing and cell-fusion induced by paramyxviruses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Activation of influenza A viruses by trypsin treatment

TL;DR: The data show that cleavage of HA is not a precondition for virus assembly and hemagglutinating activity, but that it is necessary for infectivity, and are compatible with the hypothesis that, in addition to its role in adsorption, the hemagGLutinin has another function in the infection process and cleavage is required for this function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proteolytic cleavage of the viral glycoproteins and its significance for the virulence of Newcastle disease virus.

TL;DR: In this article, a comparative study has been carried out on the biosynthesis and function of the viral glycoproteins, and the results show that the cleavage of the glycoprotein is necessary for the expression of cell fusing and hemolytic activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancement of the infectivity of influenza A and B viruses by proteolytic cleavage of the hemagglutinin polypeptide.

TL;DR: The increase in infectivity caused by proteolytic cleavage of the HA polypeptide provides a biochemical explanation for the previously observed enhancement of plaquing efficiency of influenza viruses by the inclusion of pancreation or trypsin in the agar overlay.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell fusion by Semliki Forest, influenza, and vesicular stomatitis viruses.

TL;DR: Results show that low-pH-induced fusion is a widespread property of enveloped animal viruses and that it may play a role in the infective process, and suggested a role for the influenza hemagglutinin in the low- pH-dependent membrane fusion activity.
Related Papers (5)