Norwalk Virus N-Terminal Nonstructural Protein Is Associated with Disassembly of the Golgi Complex in Transfected Cells
Open Access
- 1 May 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 78 (9), 4827-4837
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.78.9.4827-4837.2004
Abstract
Norwalk virus is the prototype strain for members of the genus Norovirus in the family Caliciviridae, which are associated with epidemic gastroenteritis in humans. The nonstructural protein encoded in the N-terminal region of the first open reading frame (ORF1) of the Norwalk virus genome is analogous in gene order to proteins 2A and 2B of the picornaviruses; the latter is known for its membrane-associated activities. Confocal microscopy imaging of cells transfected with a vector plasmid that provided expression of the entire Norwalk virus N-terminal protein (amino acids 1 to 398 of the ORF1 polyprotein) showed colocalization of this protein with cellular proteins of the Golgi apparatus. Furthermore, this colocalization was characteristically associated with a visible disassembly of the Golgi complex into discrete aggregates. Deletion of a predicted hydrophobic region (amino acids 360 to 379) in a potential 2B-like (2BL) region (amino acids 301 to 398) near the C terminus of the Norwalk virus N-terminal protein reduced Golgi colocalization and disassembly. Confocal imaging was conducted to examine the expression characteristics of fusion proteins in which the 2BL region from the N-terminal protein of Norwalk virus (a genogroup I norovirus) or MD145 (a genogroup II norovirus) was fused to the C terminus of enhanced green fluorescent protein. Expression of each fusion protein in cells showed evidence for its colocalization with the Golgi apparatus. These data indicate that the N-terminal protein of Norwalk virus interacts with the Golgi apparatus and may play a 2BL role in the induction of intracellular membrane rearrangements associated with positive-strand RNA virus replication in cells.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Viroporin-mediated Membrane PermeabilizationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Molecular Analysis of Three Ljungan Virus Isolates Reveals a New, Close-to-Root Lineage of the Picornaviridae with a Cluster of Two Unrelated 2A ProteinsJournal of Virology, 2002
- Isolation of Enzymatically Active Replication Complexes from Feline Calicivirus-Infected CellsJournal of Virology, 2002
- Food-Related Illness and Death in the United StatesEmerging Infectious Diseases, 1999
- The GRIP domain – a novel Golgi-targeting domain found in several coiled-coil proteinsCurrent Biology, 1999
- Transcriptional and translational downregulation of H-REV107, a class II tumour suppressor gene located on human chromosome 11q11-12Oncogene, 1998
- Growth-inhibitory Activity and Downregulation of the Class II Tumor-suppressor Gene H-rev107 in Tumor Cell Lines and Experimental TumorsThe Journal of cell biology, 1997
- Evolution and Taxonomy of Positive-Strand RNA Viruses: Implications of Comparative Analysis of Amino Acid SequencesCritical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 1993
- Nucleotide sequence of a region of the feline calicivirus genome which encodes picornavirus-like RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, cysteine protease and 2C polypeptidesVirus Research, 1990
- The structure and replication of calicivirus RNANature, 1978