Mapping and Functional Analysis of Interaction Sites within the Cytoplasmic Domains of the Vaccinia Virus A33R and A36R Envelope Proteins
Open Access
- 1 April 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 77 (7), 4113-4126
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.77.7.4113-4126.2003
Abstract
Incorporation of the vaccinia virus A36R protein into the outer membrane of intracellular enveloped virions (IEV) is dependent on expression of the A33R protein. Possible interactions of the 200-amino-acid cytoplasmic domain of the A36R protein with itself or with the cytoplasmic domain of the A33R, A34R, B5R, or F12L IEV membrane protein was investigated by using the yeast two-hybrid system. A strong interaction was detected only between the cytoplasmic domains of the A36R and A33R proteins. Upon further analyses, the interaction site was mapped to residues 91 to 111 of the A36R protein. To investigate the role of the A36R:A33R interaction during viral infection, five recombinant vaccinia viruses containing B5R-GFP as a marker were constructed. Four had the full-length A36R gene replaced with various-length C-terminal truncations of A36R, of which two contained residues 91 to 111 and two were missing this region. The fifth recombinant virus had an A33R gene with most of the 40-amino-acid cytoplasmic tail deleted. Residues 91 to 111 of A36R and the cytoplasmic tail of A33R were required for a strong interaction between the two proteins during viral infection and for maximal amounts of A36R protein on IEV. Mutants lacking these regions of A33R or A36R formed IEV that exhibited only short sporadic intracellular movement, displayed no actin tails, and formed small plaques on cell monolayers equivalent to those of an A36R deletion mutant and smaller than those formed by point mutations that specifically abrogate actin tail formation. The A33R interaction site of the A36R protein is highly conserved among orthopoxviruses and may overlap binding sites for cellular proteins needed for microtubular movement and actin tail formation.Keywords
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