tetralysine and Cytomegalovirus-Infections

tetralysine has been researched along with Cytomegalovirus-Infections* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for tetralysine and Cytomegalovirus-Infections

ArticleYear
Regulation of Human Cytomegalovirus Secondary Envelopment by a C-Terminal Tetralysine Motif in pUL71.
    Journal of virology, 2019, 07-01, Volume: 93, Issue:13

    Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) secondary envelopment requires the viral tegument protein pUL71. The lack of pUL71 results in a complex ultrastructural phenotype with increased numbers of viral capsids undergoing envelopment at the cytoplasmic virus assembly complex. Here, we report a role of the pUL71 C terminus in secondary envelopment. Mutant viruses expressing C-terminally truncated pUL71 (TB71del327-361 and TB71del348-351) exhibited an impaired secondary envelopment in transmission electron microscopy (TEM) studies. Further mutational analyses of the C terminus revealed a tetralysine motif whose mutation (TB71mutK348-351A) resulted in an envelopment defect that was undistinguishable from the defect caused by truncation of the pUL71 C terminus. Interestingly, not all morphological alterations that define the ultrastructural phenotype of a TB71stop virus were found in cells infected with the C-terminally mutated viruses. This suggests that pUL71 provides additional functions that modulate HCMV morphogenesis and are harbored elsewhere in pUL71. This is also reflected by an intermediate growth defect of the C-terminally mutated viruses compared to the growth of the TB71stop virus. Electron tomography and three-dimensional visualization of different stages of secondary envelopment in TB71mutK348-351A-infected cells showed unambiguously the formation of a bud neck. Furthermore, we provide evidence for progressive tegument formation linked to advancing grades of capsid envelopment, suggesting that tegumentation and envelopment are intertwined processes. Altogether, we identified the importance of the pUL71 C terminus and, specifically, of a positively charged tetralysine motif for HCMV secondary envelopment.

    Topics: Capsid; Capsid Proteins; Cell Line; Cytomegalovirus; Cytomegalovirus Infections; Cytoplasm; Humans; Mutation; Polylysine; Sequence Alignment; Viral Proteins; Virus Assembly

2019