Functional Role of the Cytoplasmic Tail Domain of the Major Envelope Fusion Protein of Group II Baculoviruses

  • Long G
  • Pan X
  • Westenberg M
  • et al.
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Abstract

F proteins from baculovirus nucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV) group II members are the major budded virus (BV) viral envelope fusion proteins. They undergo furin-like proteolysis processing in order to be functional. F proteins from different baculovirus species have a long cytoplasmic tail domain (CTD), ranging from 48 ( Spodoptera litura multicapsid NPV [MNPV]) to 78 ( Adoxophyes honmai NPV) amino acid (aa) residues, with a nonassigned function. This CTD is much longer than the CTD of GP64-like envelope fusion proteins (7 aa), which appear to be nonessential for BV infectivity. Here we have investigated the functional role of the CTD of Helicoverpa armigera single-capsid NPV (HearNPV), a group II NPV. We combined a newly constructed HearNPV f -null bacmid knockout-repair system and an Autographa californica MNPV (AcMNPV) gp64 -null bacmid knockout-pseudotype system with mutation and rescue experiments to study the functional role of the baculovirus F protein CTD. We show that except for the 16 C-terminal aa, the HearNPV F CTD is essential for virus spread from cell to cell. In addition, the CTD of HearNPV F is involved in BV production in a length-dependent manner and is essential for BV infectivity. The tyrosine residue Y658, located 16 aa from the C terminus, seems to be critical. However, HearNPV F without a CTD still rescues the infectivity of gp64 -null AcMNPV BV, indicating that the CTD is not involved in processing and fusogenicity. Altogether, our results indicate that the F protein is essential for baculovirus BV infectivity and that the CTD is important for F protein incorporation into BV.

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Long, G., Pan, X., Westenberg, M., & Vlak, J. M. (2006). Functional Role of the Cytoplasmic Tail Domain of the Major Envelope Fusion Protein of Group II Baculoviruses. Journal of Virology, 80(22), 11226–11234. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01178-06

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