Affiliation:
1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Kansas City, 5007
Rockhill Road, Kansas City, Missouri 64110
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The virion host shutoff (Vhs) protein (UL41) is a minor component of herpes
simplex virus virions which, following penetration, accelerates
turnover of host and viral mRNAs. Infected cells contain 58-kDa and
59.5-kDa forms of Vhs, which differ in the extent of phosphorylation,
yet only a 58-kDa polypeptide is incorporated into virions. In
pulse-chase experiments, the primary Vhs translation product comigrated
in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with the
58-kDa virion polypeptide, and could be chased to 59.5 kDa. While both
59.5-kDa and 58-kDa forms were found in nuclear and cytoplasmic
fractions, the 59.5-kDa form was significantly enriched in the nucleus.
Both forms were associated with intranuclear B and C capsids, yet only
the 58-kDa polypeptide was found in enveloped cytoplasmic virions. A
58-kDa form, but not the 59.5-kDa form, was found in L particles,
noninfectious particles that contain an envelope and tegument but no
capsid. The data suggest that virions contain two populations of Vhs
that are packaged by different pathways. In the first pathway, the
primary translation product is processed to 59.5 kDa, is transported to
the nucleus, binds intranuclear capsids, and is converted to 58 kDa at
some stage prior to final envelopment. The second pathway
does not involve the 59.5-kDa form or interactions between Vhs and
capsids. Instead, the primary translation product is phosphorylated to
the 58-kDa virion form and packaged through interactions with other
tegument proteins in the cytoplasm or viral envelope proteins at the
site of final
envelopment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
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