Insertion of capsid proteins from nonenveloped viruses into the retroviral budding pathway.
Journal
  Journal of virology.
Citation
  J Virol. 75(14):6527-36
Publication date
  2001 Jul
Authors
  Krishna NK
Wills JW
Investigators
  John W. Wills
Grant agencies
  National Cancer Institute
Grants
  NCI CA-47482
MeSH headings
  Retroviridae
Virus Assembly
MeSH qualifiers
  physiology
Abstract
  Retroviral Gag proteins direct the assembly and release of virus particles from the plasma membrane. The budding machinery consists of three small domains, the M (membrane-binding), I (interaction), and L (late or "pinching-off") domains. In addition, Gag proteins contain sequences that control particle size. For Rous sarcoma virus (RSV), the size determinant maps to the capsid (CA)-spacer peptide (SP) sequence, but it functions only when I domains are present to enable particles of normal density to be produced. Small deletions throughout the CA-SP sequence result in the release of particles that are very large and heterogeneous, even when I domains are present. In this report, we show that particles of relatively uniform size and normal density are released by budding when the size determinant and I domains in RSV Gag are replaced with capsid proteins from two unrelated, nonenveloped viruses: simian virus 40 and satellite tobacco mosaic virus. These results indicate that capsid proteins of nonenveloped viruses can interact among themselves within the context of Gag and be inserted into the retroviral budding pathway merely by attaching the M and L domains to their amino termini. Thus, the differences in the assembly pathways of enveloped and nonenveloped viruses may be far simpler than previously thought.
Medline ID
  21306355