The nucleoside triphosphatase and helicase activities of vaccinia virus NPH-II are essential for virus replication Journal Article


Authors: Gross, C. H.; Shuman, S.
Article Title: The nucleoside triphosphatase and helicase activities of vaccinia virus NPH-II are essential for virus replication
Abstract: Vaccinia virus NPH-II is the prototypal RNA helicase of the DExH box protein family, which is defined by six shared sequence motifs. The contributions of conserved amino acids in motifs I (TGVGKTSQ), Ia (PRI), II (DExHE), and III (TAT) to enzyme activity were assessed by alanine scanning. NPH-II-Ala proteins were expressed in baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells, purified, and characterized with respect to their RNA helicase, nucleic acid- dependent ATPase, and RNA binding functions. Alanine substitutions at Lys- 191 and Thr-192 (motif I), Arg-229 (motif Ia), and Glu-300 (motif II) caused severe defects in RNA unwinding that correlated with reduced rates of ATP hydrolysis. In contrast, alanine mutations at His-299 (motif II) and at Thr- 326 and Thr-328 (motif III) elicited defects in RNA unwinding but spared the ATPase. None of the mutations analyzed affected the binding of NPH-II to RNA. These findings, together with previous mutational studies, indicate that NPH- II motifs I, Ia, II, and VI (QRxGRxGRxxxG) are essential for nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) hydrolysis, whereas motif III and the His moiety of the DExH-box serve to couple the NTPase and helicase activities. Wild-type and mutant NPH-II-Ala genes were tested for the ability to rescue temperature- sensitive nph2-ts viruses. NPH-II mutations that inactivated the phosphohydrolase in vitro were lethal in vivo, as judged by the failure to recover rescued viruses containing the Ala substitution. The NTPase activity was necessary, but not sufficient, to sustain virus replication, insofar as mutants for which NTPase was uncoupled from unwinding (H299A, T326A, and T328A) were also lethal. We conclude that the phosphohydrolase and helicase activities of NPH-II are essential for virus replication.
Keywords: human tissue; human cell; mutation; animals; amino acid substitution; phosphatase; cell line; protein binding; nucleoside triphosphatase; enzyme activity; acid anhydride hydrolases; amino acid sequence; molecular sequence data; nucleotide sequence; vaccinia virus; binding sites; virus replication; helicase; alanine; sequence homology; rna helicases; hydrolysis; rna binding; rna, viral; zinc fingers; nucleoside-triphosphatase; rna nucleotidyltransferases; human; priority journal; article
Journal Title: Journal of Virology
Volume: 72
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0022-538X
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology  
Date Published: 1998-06-01
Start Page: 4729
End Page: 4736
Language: English
PUBMED: 9573237
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC110003
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 12 December 2016 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Stewart H Shuman
    546 Shuman
  2. Christian H Gross
    12 Gross