4.6 Article

Identification of a Proline-Kinked Amphipathic α-Helix Downstream from the Methyltransferase Domain of a Potexvirus Replicase and Its Role in Virus Replication and Perinuclear Complex Formation

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JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
卷 95, 期 20, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01906-20

关键词

NMR; amphipathic alpha-helix; endoplasmic reticulum; methyltransferase; Plantago asiatica mosaic virus; potexvirus; Tymovirales; virus replication

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资金

  1. Special Research Fund of the Institute of Global Innovation Research at Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (GIR-TUAT), Japan
  2. Program for Promotion of Basic Research Activities for Innovative Bioscience (PROBRAIN)
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [25221201, 17H03770, 19K06048]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K06048, 17H03770] Funding Source: KAKEN

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In this study, it was found that an amphipathic alpha-helix structure downstream from the methyltransferase core domain of PlAMV replicase is crucial for membrane association and virus replication. The conserved proline-kinked helical sequence among potexviruses plays a key role in forming a perinuclear complex during virus infection. However, the formation of this complex by the replicase alone does not necessarily indicate successful virus replication.
Characterized positive-strand RNA viruses replicate in association with intracellular membranes. Regarding viruses in the genus Potexvirus, the mechanism by which their RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (replicase) associates with membranes is understudied. Here, by membrane flotation analyses of the replicase of Plantago asiatica mosaic potexvirus (PlAMV), we identified a region in the methyltransferase (MET) domain as a membrane association determinant. An amphipathic alpha-helix was predicted downstream from the core region of the MET domain, and hydrophobic amino acid residues were conserved in the helical sequences in replicases of other potexviruses. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis confirmed the amphipathic alpha-helical configuration and unveiled a kink caused by a highly conserved proline residue in the alpha-helix. Substitution of this proline residue and other hydrophobic and charged residues in the amphipathic alpha-helix abolished PlAMV replication. Ectopic expression of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion with the entire MET domain resulted in the formation of a large perinuclear complex, where virus replicase and RNA colocated during virus infection. Except for the proline substitution, the amino acid substitutions in the alpha-helix that abolished virus replication also prevented the formation of the large perinuclear complex by the respective GFP-MET fusion. Small intracellular punctate structures were observed for all GFP-MET fusions, and in vitro high-molecular-weight complexes were formed by both replication-competent and -incompetent viral replicons and thus were not sufficient for replication competence. We discuss the roles of the potexvirus-specific, proline-kinked amphipathic helical structure in virus replication and intracellular large complex and punctate structure formation. IMPORTANCE RNA viruses characteristically associate with intracellular membranes during replication. Although virus replicases are assumed to possess membrane-targeting properties, their membrane association domains generally remain unidentified or poorly characterized. Here, we identified a proline-kinked amphipathic alpha-helix structure downstream from the methyltransferase core domain of PlAMV replicase as a membrane association determinant. This helical sequence, which includes the proline residue, was conserved among potexviruses and related viruses in the order Tymovirales. Substitution of the proline residue, but not the other residues necessary for replication, allowed formation of a large perinuclear complex within cells resembling those formed by PlAMV replicase and RNA during virus replication. Our results demonstrate the role of the amphipathic alpha-helix in PlAMV replicase in a perinuclear complex formation and virus replication and that perinuclear complex formation by the replicase alone will not necessarily indicate successful virus replication.

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