Abstract

The Flavivirus NS5 protein possesses both (guanine-N7)-methyltransferase and nucleoside-2'-O methyltransferase activities required for sequential methylation of the cap structure present at the 5' end of the Flavivirus RNA genome. Seventeen mutations were introduced into the dengue virus type 2 NS5 methyltransferase domain, targeting amino acids either predicted to be directly involved in S-adenosyl-l-methionine binding or important for NS5 conformation and/or charged interactions. The effects of the mutations on (i) (guanine-N7)-methyltransferase and nucleoside-2'-O methyltransferase activities using biochemical assays based on a bacterially expressed NS5 methyltransferase domain and (ii) viral replication using a dengue virus type 2 infectious cDNA clone were examined. Clustered mutations targeting the S-adenosyl-l-methionine binding pocket or an active site residue abolished both methyltransferase activities and viral replication, demonstrating that both methyltransferase activities utilize a single S-adenosyl-l-methionine binding pocket. Substitutions to single amino acids binding S-adenosyl-l-methionine decreased both methyltransferase activities by varying amounts. However, viruses that replicated at wild type levels could be recovered with mutations that reduced both activities by >75%, suggesting that only a threshold level of methyltransferase activity was required for virus replication in vivo. Mutation of residues outside of regions directly involved in S-adenosyl-l-methionine binding or catalysis also affected methyltransferase activity and virus replication. The recovery of viruses containing compensatory second site mutations in the NS5 and NS3 proteins identified regions of the methyltransferase domain important for overall stability of the protein or likely to play a role in virus replication distinct from that of cap methylation.

Highlights

  • Introduction of Mutated cDNA Fragments intopQE-30— cDNA fragments containing the NS5 mutations and encoding the first 296 amino acids of NS5 were amplified from the respective pCR-Blunt II-TOPO or pDVWS601 clones using the primers NS5-MT1 (5Ј-CACGGATCCGGAACTGGCAACATAGGAGAGACG-3Ј; DENV-2 nt 7571–7593 are underlined) and NS5-MT296 (5Ј-CTGCAGGTCGACTTATTGGTCATAGTGCCATGATGTTTC-3Ј; DENV-2 nt 8457– 8434 are underlined, and the stop codon is in bold)

  • To identify residues of the DENV-2 NS5 protein that are required for N7 and 2Ј-O MTase activities and/or important for virus replication, we introduced a number of single site and multiple mutations including clustered-charge-to-Ala mutations into the DENV-2 NS5 gene

  • Structural analysis and MTase activity assays using short capped RNA transcripts first demonstrated that the DENV-2 MTase domain was a 2Ј-O MTase and suggested it was unlikely to function as a N7 MTase [12]

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Cells Lines and Virus Titration—The growth of BHK-21, Aedes albopictus C6/36, and Vero cells and the production of DENV-2 stocks in C6/36 cells have all been described previously [32, 33]. CDNA fragments containing the NS5 mutations G48A, G48P, S56A, S56T, W87I, W87K, W87Y or D131A, D131E, and D131N were digested with HpaI7406/AatII8570 or StuI7874/ AatII8570, respectively, and cloned into the corresponding sites of pDVWS601 to produce pDVWS601-NS5G48A, pDVWS601NS5G48P, pDVWS601-NS5S56A, pDVWS601-NS5S56T, pDVWS601-NS5W87I, pDVWS601-NS5W87K, pDVWS601NS5W87Y, pDVWS601-NS5D131A, pDVWS601-NS5D131E, and pDVWS601-NS5D131N. N7 and 2Ј-O MTase Activity Assays—The determination of the N7 MTase activities of the wild type and mutant NS5 MTase proteins was performed in duplicate in a reaction mixture containing 1–5 ␮Ci of S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-3H]methionine (64 –72Ci/mmol; Amersham Biosciences), 1–5 ␮g of GTP-capped RNA comprising nt 1–211 of the DENV-2 5Ј-UTR (in vitro transcribed in the presence of biotinylated CTP using the T7 RiboMax Express kit from Promega), and 100 nM enzyme in assay buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 20 mM NaCl, 2 mM dithiothreitol, 0.05% CHAPS, and 5 units of RNasin inhibitor [11, 27]) at room temperature (22 °C).

RESULTS
Wild type
Wild type control No effect Reverted
DISCUSSION
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