Identification of Lassa virus glycoprotein signal peptide as a trans-acting maturation factor

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Abstract

Lassa virus glycoprotein is translated as a precursor (pre-GP-C) into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and is cotranslationally cleaved into the signal peptide and GP-C, before GP-C is proteolytically processed into its subunits GP1 and GP2. The signal peptide of pre-GP-C comprises 58 amino acids. The substitution of Lassa virus pre-GP-C signal peptide with another signal peptide still mediates translocation and the release of signal peptide but abolishes the proteolytic cleavage of GP-C into GP1 and GP2. Remarkably, cleavage of GP-C from these hybrid pre-GP-C substrates was restored on coexpression of the wild-type pre-GP-C signal peptide, indicating that the signal peptide functions as a trans-acting factor to promote Lassa virus GP-C processing. To our knowledge, this is the first report on a signal peptide that is essential for proteolytic processing of a secretory pathway protein.

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APA

Eichler, R., Lenz, O., Strecker, T., Eickmann, M., Klenk, H. D., & Garten, W. (2003). Identification of Lassa virus glycoprotein signal peptide as a trans-acting maturation factor. EMBO Reports, 4(11), 1084–1088. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.embor.7400002

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