Publication: Cleavage of the human respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein at two distinct sites is required for activation of membrane fusion
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National Academy of Sciences
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Preparations of purified full-length fusion (F) protein of human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) expressed in recombinant vaccinia-F infected cells, or of an anchorless mutant (F(TM(-))) lacking the C-terminal 50 amino acids secreted from vaccinia-F(TM(-))-infected cells contain a minor polypeptide that is an intermediate product of proteolytic processing of the F protein precursor F0. N-terminal sequencing of the intermediate demonstrated that it is generated by cleavage at a furin-motif, residues 106-109 of the F sequence. By contrast, the F1 N terminus derives from cleavage at residue 137 of F0 which is also C-terminal to a furin recognition site at residues 131-136. Site-directed mutagenesis indicates that processing of F0 protein involves independent cleavage at both sites. Both cleavages are required for the F protein to be active in membrane fusion as judged by syncytia formation, and they allow changes in F structure from cone- to lollipop-shaped spikes and the formation of rosettes by anchorless F.
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Amino Acid Motifs Amino Acid Sequence Animals Cell Line Cricetinae Cytopathogenic Effect, Viral Endopeptidases Giant Cells Humans Kidney Membrane Fusion Mesocricetus Microscopy, Electron Molecular Sequence Data Mutagenesis, Site-Directed Protein Conformation Protein Precursors Recombinant Fusion Proteins Respiratory Syncytial Viruses Structure-Activity Relationship Viral Fusion Proteins Viral Proteins Protein Processing, Post-Translational
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Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2001 Aug 14;98(17):9859-64.








