Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville 22908.
Abstract
The matrix (M) protein of vesicular stomatitis virus serves as an endogenous inhibitor of viral transcription, a function missing or deficient in M proteins of temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants assigned to complementation group III. Previous studies with mutant tsO23(III) and vaccinia virus M-gene expression vectors revealed that the temperature-sensitive phenotype is due to a mutation leading to substitution of phenylalanine for leucine at amino acid III, whereas loss of the major antigenic determinant (epitope 1) of the mutant M protein results from the substitution of glutamic acid for the wild-type amino acid glycine at position 21 (Y. Li, L. Luo, R. M. Snyder, and R. R. Wagner, J. Virol. 62:3729-3737, 1988). We demonstrate here that transcription inhibition activity is restored to rescued tsO23 virus only when the rescuing vaccinia virus recombinant expresses M protein with glycine and not glutamic acid at amino acid 21. These experiments indicate the importance of the conformational integrity of the amino-terminal domain in determining the capacity of the vesicular stomatitis virus M protein to down regulate endogenous transcription.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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