Interaction between Parvovirus NS2 Protein and Nuclear Export Factor Crm1 Is Important for Viral Egress from the Nucleus of Murine Cells
Open Access
- 1 April 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 76 (7), 3257-3266
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.76.7.3257-3266.2002
Abstract
A mutation that disrupts the interaction between the NS2 protein of minute virus of mice and the nuclear export factor Crm1 results in a block to egress of mutant-generated full virions from the nucleus of infected murine cells. These mutants produce wild-type levels of monomer and dimer replicative DNA forms but are impaired in their ability to generate progeny single-stranded DNA in restrictive murine cells in the first round of infection. The NS2-Crm1 interaction mutant can be distinguished phenotypically from an NS2-null mutant and reveals a role for the Crm1-mediated export pathway at a late step in viral infection.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- The NS2 Protein Generated by the Parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice Is Degraded by the Proteasome in a Manner Independent of Ubiquitin Chain Elongation or ActivationVirology, 2001
- The N-terminal Nuclear Export Sequence of IκBα Is Required for RanGTP-dependent Binding to CRM1Published by Elsevier ,2001
- CRM1 Mediates Nuclear Export of Nonstructural Protein 2 from Parvovirus Minute Virus of MiceBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1999
- Amino Acids 16–275 of Minute Virus of Mice NS1 Include a Domain That Specifically Binds (ACCA)2–3-Containing DNAVirology, 1998
- Two-way trafficking with RanTrends in Cell Biology, 1998
- The NS2 Polypeptide of Parvovirus MVM Is Required for Capsid Assembly in Murine CellsVirology, 1997
- DNA replication in the autonomous parvovirusesSeminars in Virology, 1995
- Nuclear Targeting of the Parvoviral Replicator Molecule NS1: Evidence for Self-Association Prior to Nuclear TransportVirology, 1993
- Alternate splicing in a parvoviral nonstructural gene links a common amino-terminal sequence to downstream domains which confer radically different localization and turnover characteristicsVirology, 1990
- The autonomous parvovirus MVM encodes two nonstructural proteins in addition to its capsid polypeptidesVirology, 1983