TY - JOUR
T1 - Cystoviral polymerase complex protein P7 uses its acidic C-terminal tail to regulate the RNA-directed RNA polymerase P2
AU - Alphonse, Sébastien
AU - Arnold, Jamie J.
AU - Bhattacharya, Shibani
AU - Wang, Hsin
AU - Kloss, Brian
AU - Cameron, Craig E.
AU - Ghose, Ranajeet
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Drs. Leonard Mindich (Public Health Research Institute), David Jeruzalmi (CCNY) and Andrea Piserchio (CCNY) for useful discussions. Dr. Aneel K. Aggarwal (Mt. Sinai School of Medicine) is thanked for use of the Panvera Beacon 2000. Dr. Paul Gottlieb (CCNY) is thanked for the kind gift of the pPG24 plasmid. This work is supported by National Science Foundation grant MCB 083141 (R.G.); J.J.A. and C.E.C. are supported by grant AI45818 from National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; the structural biology facilities at CCNY are partially supported by National Institutes of Health grant 8G12MD007603.
PY - 2014/7/15
Y1 - 2014/7/15
N2 - In bacteriophages of the cystovirus family, the polymerase complex (PX) encodes a 75-kDa RNA-directed RNA polymerase (P2) that transcribes the double-stranded RNA genome. Also a constituent of the PX is the essential protein P7 that, in addition to accelerating PX assembly and facilitating genome packaging, plays a regulatory role in transcription. Deletion of P7 from the PX leads to aberrant plus-strand synthesis suggesting its influence on the transcriptase activity of P2. Here, using solution NMR techniques and the P2 and P7 proteins from cystovirus ψ12, we demonstrate their largely electrostatic interaction in vitro. Chemical shift perturbations on P7 in the presence of P2 suggest that this interaction involves the dynamic C-terminal tail of P7, more specifically an acidic cluster therein. Patterns of chemical shift changes induced on P2 by the P7 C-terminus resemble those seen in the presence of single-stranded RNA suggesting similarities in binding. This association between P2 and P7 reduces the affinity of the former toward template RNA and results in its decreased activity both in de novo RNA synthesis and in extending a short primer. Given the presence of C-terminal acidic tracts on all cystoviral P7 proteins, the electrostatic nature of the P2/P7 interaction is likely conserved within the family and could constitute a mechanism through which P7 regulates transcription in cystoviruses.
AB - In bacteriophages of the cystovirus family, the polymerase complex (PX) encodes a 75-kDa RNA-directed RNA polymerase (P2) that transcribes the double-stranded RNA genome. Also a constituent of the PX is the essential protein P7 that, in addition to accelerating PX assembly and facilitating genome packaging, plays a regulatory role in transcription. Deletion of P7 from the PX leads to aberrant plus-strand synthesis suggesting its influence on the transcriptase activity of P2. Here, using solution NMR techniques and the P2 and P7 proteins from cystovirus ψ12, we demonstrate their largely electrostatic interaction in vitro. Chemical shift perturbations on P7 in the presence of P2 suggest that this interaction involves the dynamic C-terminal tail of P7, more specifically an acidic cluster therein. Patterns of chemical shift changes induced on P2 by the P7 C-terminus resemble those seen in the presence of single-stranded RNA suggesting similarities in binding. This association between P2 and P7 reduces the affinity of the former toward template RNA and results in its decreased activity both in de novo RNA synthesis and in extending a short primer. Given the presence of C-terminal acidic tracts on all cystoviral P7 proteins, the electrostatic nature of the P2/P7 interaction is likely conserved within the family and could constitute a mechanism through which P7 regulates transcription in cystoviruses.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jmb.2014.04.028
DO - 10.1016/j.jmb.2014.04.028
M3 - Article
C2 - 24813120
AN - SCOPUS:84903196414
SN - 0022-2836
VL - 426
SP - 2580
EP - 2593
JO - Journal of Molecular Biology
JF - Journal of Molecular Biology
IS - 14
ER -