Abstract
2,3 Dehydro-2-deoxy-N-acetyl-neuraminic acid (DNANA) competitively inhibits the neuraminidase activity of Hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) from Sendai virus. The inhibition constant depends on the presence of the Fusion (F) protein, which is 30 μM in the presence of active F protein and 50 μM when the F protein is inactivated. These data correlate with previously reported evidence of interaction of the F protein with HN (Dallocchio, F., Tomasi, M., and Bellini, T. (1994) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 201, 988-993). Desialyzation of erythrocytes, by Clostridium neuraminidase, lowers the hemolytic activity of SV to <0.1% of that observed on untreated erythrocytes. However, addition of DNANA causes a concentration-dependent increase of hemolytic activity. Both HN and the F protein are required for the activation of hemolytic activity by DNANA. The affinity constant for DNANA, calculated from the activation of hemolytic activity on desialyzed erythrocytes, is 35 μM, very close to the Ki for neuraminidase activity. These data suggest that the binding of the F protein to HN, induced by the binding to HN of a substrate or a substrate analogue, causes a conformational change which activates the F protein.
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More From: Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
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