Microbiology Spectrum (Dec 2021)
Two Cholesterol Recognition Amino Acid Consensus Motifs of GP64 with Uncleaved Signal Peptide Are Required for Bombyx mori Nucleopolyhedrovirus Infection
Abstract
ABSTRACT The signal peptide (SP) of integrated membrane proteins is removed cotranslationally or posttranslationally in the endoplasmic reticulum, while GP64, a membrane fusion protein of Bombyx mori nucleopolyhedrovirus (BmNPV), retains its SP in the mature protein and virion. In this study, we revealed that uncleaved SP is a key determinant with additional functions in infection. First, uncleaved SP endows BmNPV with strong virulence; second, SP retention-induced BmNPV infection depends on cholesterol recognition amino acid consensus domain 1 (CRAC1) and CRAC2. In contrast, the recombinant virus with SP-cleaved GP64 has reduced infectivity, and only CRAC2 is required for BmNPV infection. Furthermore, we showed that cholesterol in the plasma membrane is an important fusion receptor that interacts with CRAC2 of GP64. Our study suggested that BmNPV GP64 is a key cholesterol-binding protein and uncleaved SP determines GP64's unique dependence on the CRAC domains. IMPORTANCE BmNPV is a severe pathogen that mainly infects silkworms. GP64 is the key membrane fusion protein that mediates BmNPV infection, and some studies have indicated that cholesterol and lipids are involved in BmNPV infection. A remarkable difference from other membrane fusion proteins is that BmNPV GP64 retains its SP in the mature protein, but the cause is still unclear. In this study, we investigated the reason why BmNPV retains this SP, and its effects on protein targeting, virulence, and CRAC dependence were revealed by comparison of recombinant viruses harboring SP-cleaved or uncleaved GP64. Our study provides a basis for understanding the dependence of BmNPV infection on cholesterol/lipids and host specificity.
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