J Biol Chem. 2012 Jul 13;287(29):24473-82
Irigoyen N, Castón JR, Rodríguez JF.
In many viruses, a precursor particle, or procapsid, is assembled and
undergoes massive chemical and physical modification
to produce the infectious capsid. Capsid assembly
and maturation are finely tuned processes in which viral and host
factors
participate. We show that the precursor of the VP2
capsid protein (pVP2) of the infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV), a
double-stranded RNA virus, is processed at the
C-terminal domain (CTD) by a host protease, the puromycin-sensitive
aminopeptidase
(PurSA). The pVP2 CTD (71 residues) has an
important role in determining the various conformations of VP2 (441
residues) that
build the T = 13 complex capsid. pVP2 CTD activity
is controlled by co- and posttranslational proteolytic modifications of
different targets by the VP4 viral protease and by
VP2 itself to yield the mature VP2-441 species. Puromycin-sensitive
aminopeptidase
is responsible for the peptidase activity that
cleaves the Arg-452-Arg-453 bond to generate the intermediate pVP2-452
polypeptide.
A pVP2 R453A substitution abrogates PurSA activity.
We used a baculovirus-based system to express the IBDV polyprotein in
insect cells and found inefficient formation of
virus-like particles similar to IBDV virions, which correlates with the
absence
of puromycin-sensitive aminopeptidase in these
cells. Virus-like particle assembly was nonetheless rescued efficiently
by
coexpression of chicken PurSA or pVP2-452 protein.
Silencing or pharmacological inhibition of puromycin-sensitive
aminopeptidase
activity in cell lines permissive for IBDV
replication caused a major blockade in assembly and/or maturation of
infectious
IBDV particles, as virus yields were reduced
markedly. PurSA activity is thus essential for IBDV replication.