Mutations in HPV18 E1^E4 Impact Virus Capsid Assembly, Infectivity Competence, and Maturation.
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Authors
Biryukov, Jennifer
Myers, Jocelyn C
McLaughlin-Drubin, Margaret E
Milici, Janice
Meyers, Craig
Publication Date
2017-12-19Journal Title
Viruses
ISSN
1999-4915
Publisher
MDPI AG
Volume
9
Issue
12
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Biryukov, J., Myers, J. C., McLaughlin-Drubin, M. E., Griffin, H., Milici, J., Doorbar, J., & Meyers, C. (2017). Mutations in HPV18 E1^E4 Impact Virus Capsid Assembly, Infectivity Competence, and Maturation.. Viruses, 9 (12) https://doi.org/10.3390/v9120385
Abstract
The most highly expressed protein during the productive phase of the human papillomavirus (HPV) life cycle is E1^E4. Its full role during infection remains to be established. HPV E1^E4 is expressed during both the early and late stages of the virus life cycle and contributes to viral genome amplification. In an attempt to further outline the functions of E1^E4, and determine whether it plays a role in viral capsid assembly and viral infectivity, we examined wild-type E1^E4 as well as four E1^E4 truncation mutants. Our study revealed that HPV18 genomes containing the shortest truncated form of E1^E4, the 17/18 mutant, produced viral titers that were similar to wild-type virus and significantly higher compared to virions containing the three longer E1^E4 mutants. Additionally, the infectivity of virus containing the shortest E1^E4 mutation was equivalent to wild-type and significantly higher than the other three mutants. In contrast, infectivity was completely abrogated for virus containing the longer E1^E4 mutants, regardless of virion maturity. Taken together, our results indicate for the first time that HPV18 E1^E4 impacts capsid assembly and viral infectivity as well as virus maturation.
Keywords
Cells, Cultured, Fibroblasts, Humans, Capsid, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion, Oncogene Proteins, Viral, Viral Load, Virus Assembly, Mutation, Microbial Viability, Human papillomavirus 18
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_PC_13050)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/v9120385
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/275774
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