Abstract

The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL37 glycoprotein (gpUL37) is internally cleaved and its products divergently traffic to mitochondria or are retained in the secretory pathway. To define the requirements for gpUL37 cleavage, residues -1 and -3 of the consensus endoplasmic reticulum (ER) signal peptidase I site within exon 3 (UL37x3) were replaced by bulky tyrosines (gpUL37 cleavage site mutant I). Internal cleavage of this UL37x3 mutant was inhibited, verifying usage of the consensus site at amino acids (aa) 193/194. The full-length mitochondrial species of gpUL37 cleavage site mutant I was N glycosylated and endoglycosidase H sensitive, indicating that ER translocation and processing took place prior to its mitochondrial importation. Moreover, these results suggest that internal cleavage of gpUL37 is not necessary for its N glycosylation. Partial deletion or disruption of the UL37 hydrophobic core immediately upstream of the cleavage site resulted in decreased protein abundance, suggesting that the UL37x3 hydrophobic alpha-helix contributes to either correct folding or stability of gpUL37. Insertion of the UL37x3 hydrophobic core and cleavage site into pUL37(M), a splice variant of gpUL37 which lacks these sequences and is neither proteolytically cleaved nor N glycosylated, resulted in its internal cleavage and N glycosylation. Its NH(2)-terminal fragment, pUL37(M-NH2), was detected more abundantly in mitochondria, while its N-glycosylated C-terminal fragment, gpUL37(M-COOH), was detected predominantly in the ER in a manner analogous to that of gpUL37 cleavage products. These results indicate that UL37x3 aa 178 to 205 are prerequisite for gpUL37 internal cleavage and alter UL37 protein topology allowing N glycosylation of its C-terminal sequences. In contrast, the NH(2)-terminal UL37x1 hydrophobic leader, present in pUL37x1, pUL37(M), and gpUL37, is not cleaved from mature UL37 protein, retaining a membrane anchor for UL37 isoforms during trafficking. Taken together, these results suggest that HCMV gpUL37 undergoes sequential trafficking, during which it is ER translocated, processed, and then mitochondrially imported.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call