Publication | Open Access
Coronavirus Nucleocapsid Protein Facilitates Template Switching and Is Required for Efficient Transcription
229
Citations
25
References
2009
Year
Viral ReplicationN ProteinGeneticsMolecular BiologyTemplate SwitchingViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureTranscriptional RegulationProtein FoldingRna AnnealingEfficient TranscriptionVirus GeneViral GeneticsVirologyGene ExpressionStructural BiologyNatural SciencesProtein EngineeringMicrobiologyIs RequiredMedicine
Purified nucleocapsid protein (N protein) from transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) enhanced hammerhead ribozyme self-cleavage and favored nucleic acid annealing, properties that define RNA chaperones, as previously reported. Several TGEV N-protein deletion mutants were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified, and their RNA binding ability and RNA chaperone activity were evaluated. The smallest N-protein domain analyzed with RNA chaperone activity, facilitating DNA and RNA annealing, contained the central unstructured region (amino acids 117 to 268). Interestingly, N protein and its deletion mutants with RNA chaperone activity enhanced template switching in a retrovirus-derived heterologous system, reinforcing the concept that TGEV N protein is an RNA chaperone that could be involved in template switching. This result is in agreement with the observation that in vivo, N protein is not necessary for TGEV replication, but it is required for efficient transcription.
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