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Orthoparamyxovirinae C Proteins Have a Common Origin and a Common Structural Organization

Authors :
Roy, Ada
Chan Mine, Emeric
Gaifas, Lorenzo
Leyrat, Cedric
Valentina A, Volchkova
Baudin, Florence
Martinez-Gil, Luis
Volchkov, Viktor
Karlin, David G.
Bourhis, Jean-Marie
Jamin, Marc
Roy, Ada
Chan Mine, Emeric
Gaifas, Lorenzo
Leyrat, Cedric
Valentina A, Volchkova
Baudin, Florence
Martinez-Gil, Luis
Volchkov, Viktor
Karlin, David G.
Bourhis, Jean-Marie
Jamin, Marc
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The protein C is a small viral protein encoded in an overlapping frame of the P gene in the subfamily Orthoparamyxovirinae. This protein, expressed by alternative translation initiation, is a virulence factor that regulates viral transcription, replication, and production of defective interfering RNA, interferes with the host-cell innate immunity systems and supports the assembly of viral particles and budding. We expressed and purified full-length and an N-terminally truncated C protein from Tupaia paramyxovirus (TupV) C protein (genus Narmovirus). We solved the crystal structure of the C-terminal part of TupV C protein at a resolution of 2.4 Å and found that it is structurally similar to Sendai virus C protein, suggesting that despite undetectable sequence conservation, these proteins are homologous. We characterized both truncated and full-length proteins by SEC-MALLS and SEC-SAXS and described their solution structures by ensemble models. We established a mini-replicon assay for the related Nipah virus (NiV) and showed that TupV C inhibited the expression of NiV minigenome in a concentration-dependent manner as efficiently as the NiV C protein. A previous study found that the Orthoparamyxovirinae C proteins form two clusters without detectable sequence similarity, raising the question of whether they were homologous or instead had originated independently. Since TupV C and SeV C are representatives of these two clusters, our discovery that they have a similar structure indicates that all Orthoparamyxovirine C proteins are homologous. Our results also imply that, strikingly, a STAT1-binding site is encoded by exactly the same RNA region of the P/C gene across Paramyxovirinae, but in different reading frames (P or C), depending on which cluster they belong to.<br />French Agence Nationale de la Recherche<br />Fond de la Recherche Médicale (FRM)<br />Grenoble Instruct-ERIC center<br />FRISBI<br />University Grenoble Alpes graduate school (Ecoles Universitaires de Recherche)<br />Peer Reviewed

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1390769048
Document Type :
Electronic Resource