Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, College of Biological Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, N1G 2W1
Abstract
An investigation of virus-specific protein synthesis in infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV)-infected rainbow trout gonad cells was undertaken to find a relationship between the coding capacity of the virus genome (two segments of double-stranded RNA of 2.5 × 10
6
and 2.3 × 10
6
molecular weight) and the sizes and relative amounts of virus-specific proteins. Using polyacrylamide slabgel electrophoresis and autoradiography, eight distinct virus-specific polypeptides were detected in infected, [
35
S]methionine-labeled cells. These proteins may be grouped into three size classes on the basis of molecular weight: (i) large, α (90,000); (ii) medium, β
1
(59,000), β
2
(58,000), and β
3
(57,000); and (iii) small, γ
1
(29,000), γ
1A
(28,000), γ
2
(27,000), and γ
3
(25,000). The combined molecular weight of these polypetides (373,000) is beyond the coding capacity of the virus genome. Purified IPNV contained polypeptides α, β
3
, γ
1
, and γ
1A
. Pulse-chase experiments and tryptic peptide map comparisons revealed that only four of the eight intracellular proteins were primary gene products, namely, α, β
1
, γ
1
, and β
2
, with a combined molecular weight of 205,000. Of these primary gene products only the α polypeptide was found to be stable, whereas the other three underwent intracellular proteolytic cleavage during virus morphogenesis. Polypeptide β
1
was cleaved to generate β
2
and β
3
; γ
1
was trimmed to produce γ
1A
, and the only nonstructural primary gene product, γ
2
, was found to be a precursor of γ
3
. These results suggest that IPNV possesses a unique mechanism to synthesize three size classes of proteins using mRNA transcripts from two high-molecular-weight double-stranded RNA genome segments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology