Publication | Open Access
The N-terminal (pre-S2) domain of a hepatitis B virus surface glycoprotein is translocated across membranes by downstream signal sequences
77
Citations
30
References
1990
Year
Viral ReplicationImmunologyHepatitis BMolecular BiologyViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureCoding RegionViral HepatitisUpstream Domain TranslocationVirologyStructural BiologyDistal AtgSignal TransductionMolecular VirologyPathogenesisHepatitisDownstream Signal SequencesSystems BiologyMedicine
The coding region for the hepatitis B virus surface antigens contains three in-phase ATG codons which direct the synthesis of three related polypeptides. The 24-kilodalton major surface (or S) glycoprotein is initiated at the most distal ATG and is a transmembrane protein whose translocation across the bilayer is mediated by at least two uncleaved signal sequences. The product of the next upstream ATG is the 31-kilodalton pre-S2 protein, which contains 55 additional amino acids attached to the N terminus of the S protein. This pre-S2-specific domain is translocated into the endoplasmic reticulum. Using a coupled in vitro translation-translocation system, we showed that (i) the pre-S2 domain itself lacks functional signal sequence activity, (ii) its translocation across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane is mediated by downstream signals within the S domain, and (iii) the N-terminal signal sequence of the S protein can translocate upstream protein domains in the absence of other signals. The hepatitis B virus pre-S2 protein is an example of a natural protein which displays upstream domain translocation, a phenomenon whose existence was originally inferred from the behavior of synthetic fusion proteins in vitro.
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