The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.

The replication of many RNA viruses involves the translation of polyproteins, whose processing by endopeptidases is a critical step for the release of functional subunits. P1 is the first protease encoded in plant potyvirus genomes; once activated by an as-yet-unknown host factor, it acts in cis on...

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Main Authors: Fabio Pasin, Carmen Simón-Mateo, Juan Antonio García
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-03-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3946448?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9b070ffee6544c7aafc5e652ed01f8c92020-11-25T02:17:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742014-03-01103e100398510.1371/journal.ppat.1003985The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.Fabio PasinCarmen Simón-MateoJuan Antonio GarcíaThe replication of many RNA viruses involves the translation of polyproteins, whose processing by endopeptidases is a critical step for the release of functional subunits. P1 is the first protease encoded in plant potyvirus genomes; once activated by an as-yet-unknown host factor, it acts in cis on its own C-terminal end, hydrolyzing the P1-HCPro junction. Earlier research suggests that P1 cooperates with HCPro to inhibit host RNA silencing defenses. Using Plum pox virus as a model, we show that although P1 does not have a major direct role in RNA silencing suppression, it can indeed modulate HCPro function by its self-cleavage activity. To study P1 protease regulation, we used bioinformatic analysis and in vitro activity experiments to map the core C-terminal catalytic domain. We present evidence that the hypervariable region that precedes the protease domain is predicted as intrinsically disordered, and that it behaves as a negative regulator of P1 proteolytic activity in in vitro cleavage assays. In viral infections, removal of the P1 protease antagonistic regulator is associated with greater symptom severity, induction of salicylate-dependent pathogenesis-related proteins, and reduced viral loads. We suggest that fine modulation of a viral protease activity has evolved to keep viral amplification below host-detrimental levels, and thus to maintain higher long-term replicative capacity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3946448?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabio Pasin
Carmen Simón-Mateo
Juan Antonio García
spellingShingle Fabio Pasin
Carmen Simón-Mateo
Juan Antonio García
The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Fabio Pasin
Carmen Simón-Mateo
Juan Antonio García
author_sort Fabio Pasin
title The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
title_short The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
title_full The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
title_fullStr The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
title_full_unstemmed The hypervariable amino-terminus of P1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
title_sort hypervariable amino-terminus of p1 protease modulates potyviral replication and host defense responses.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2014-03-01
description The replication of many RNA viruses involves the translation of polyproteins, whose processing by endopeptidases is a critical step for the release of functional subunits. P1 is the first protease encoded in plant potyvirus genomes; once activated by an as-yet-unknown host factor, it acts in cis on its own C-terminal end, hydrolyzing the P1-HCPro junction. Earlier research suggests that P1 cooperates with HCPro to inhibit host RNA silencing defenses. Using Plum pox virus as a model, we show that although P1 does not have a major direct role in RNA silencing suppression, it can indeed modulate HCPro function by its self-cleavage activity. To study P1 protease regulation, we used bioinformatic analysis and in vitro activity experiments to map the core C-terminal catalytic domain. We present evidence that the hypervariable region that precedes the protease domain is predicted as intrinsically disordered, and that it behaves as a negative regulator of P1 proteolytic activity in in vitro cleavage assays. In viral infections, removal of the P1 protease antagonistic regulator is associated with greater symptom severity, induction of salicylate-dependent pathogenesis-related proteins, and reduced viral loads. We suggest that fine modulation of a viral protease activity has evolved to keep viral amplification below host-detrimental levels, and thus to maintain higher long-term replicative capacity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3946448?pdf=render
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