The Hinge of the Human Papillomavirus Type 11 E2 Protein Contains Major Determinants for Nuclear Localization and Nuclear Matrix Association

Author:

Zou Nianxiang1,Lin Biing Yuan1,Duan Fenghai1,Lee Kyung-Yeol1,Jin Ge1,Guan Ran1,Yao Guang1,Lefkowitz Elliot J.2,Broker Thomas R.1,Chow Louise T.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics1 and

2. Microbiology and Immunology,2 University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35294-0005

Abstract

ABSTRACT The E2 protein of papillomaviruses is a site-specific DNA binding nuclear protein. It functions as the primary replication origin recognition protein and assists in the assembly of the preinitiation complex. It also helps regulate transcription from the native viral promoter. The E2 protein consists of an amino-terminal (N) trans -acting domain, a central hinge (H) domain, and a carboxyl-terminal (C) protein dimerization and DNA binding domain. The hinge is highly divergent among papillomaviruses, and little is known about its functions. We fused the enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP) with the full-length human papillomavirus type 11 (HPV-11) E2 protein and showed that the resultant fusion, called gfpE2, maintained transcription and replication functions of the wild-type protein and formed similar subnuclear foci. Using a series of GFP fusion proteins, we showed that the hinge conferred strong nuclear localization, whereas the N or C domain was present in both cytoplasm and nucleus. Biochemical fractionation demonstrated that the N domain and hinge, but not the C domain, independently associated with the nuclear matrix. Mutational analyses showed that a cluster of basic amino acid residues, which is conserved among many mucosotropic papillomaviruses, was required for efficient nuclear localization and nuclear matrix association. This mutation no longer repressed the HPV-11 upstream regulatory region-controlled reporter expression. However, a very small fraction of this mutant colocalized with E1 in the nucleus, perhaps by a piggyback mechanism, and was able to support transient replication. We propose that the hinge is critical for the diverse regulatory functions of the HPV-11 E2 protein during mRNA transcription and viral DNA replication.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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