Background: Subviral particles of hepatitis B virus (HBV) composed of L protein deletion variants with the 48 N-terminal amino acids of preS joined to the N-terminus of S protein (1-48preS/S) induced broadly neutralizing antibodies after immunization of mice with a Semliki Forest virus vector. A practical limitation for use as vaccine is the suboptimal secretion of such particles. The role of the N-terminal preS myristoylation in the cellular retention of full-length L protein is described controversially in the literature and the relation of these data to the truncated L protein was unknown. Thus, we studied the effect of preS myristoylation signal suppression on 1-48preS/S secretion efficiency, glycosylation and subcellular distribution. Findings. The findings are that 1-48preS/S is secreted, and that removal of the N-terminal myristoylation signal in its G2A variant reduced secretion slightly, but significantly. The glycosylation pattern of 1-48preS/S was not affected by the removal of the myristoylation signal (G2A mutant) but was different than natural L protein, whereby N4 of the preS and N3 of the S domain were ectopically glycosylated. This suggested cotranslational translocation of 1-48preS in contrast to natural L protein. The 1-48preS/S bearing a myristoylation signal was localized in a compact, perinuclear pattern with strong colocalization of preS and S epitopes, while the non-myristoylated mutants demonstrated a dispersed, granular cytoplasmic distribution with weaker colocalization. Conclusions: The large deletion in 1-48preS/S in presence of the myristoylation site facilitated formation and secretion of protein particles with neutralizing preS1 epitopes at their surface and could be a useful feature for future hepatitis B vaccines. © 2013 Niedre-Otomere et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Niedre-Otomere, B., Bogdanova, A., Bruvere, R., Ose, V., Gerlich, W. H., Pumpens, P., … Kozlovska, T. (2013). Posttranslational modifications and secretion efficiency of immunogenic hepatitis B virus L protein deletion variants. Virology Journal, 10. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-10-63
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