Crystal structure of poliovirus 3CD protein: virally encoded protease and precursor to the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
Journal
  Journal of virology.
Citation
  J Virol. 81(7):3583-96
Publication date
  2007 Apr
Authors
  Marcotte LL
Wass AB
Gohara DW
Pathak HB
Arnold JJ
Filman DJ
Cameron CE
Hogle JM
Investigators
  Craig Cameron
Grant agencies
  National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Grants
  NIAID AI 053531
NIAID AI 20566
MeSH headings
  Cysteine Endopeptidases
Poliovirus
Protein Precursors
RNA Replicase
Viral Proteins
MeSH qualifiers
  chemistry
metabolism
enzymology
Abstract
  Poliovirus 3CD is a multifunctional protein that serves as a precursor to the protease 3C(pro) and the viral polymerase 3D(pol) and also plays a role in the control of viral replication. Although 3CD is a fully functional protease, it lacks polymerase activity. We have solved the crystal structures of 3CD at a 3.4-A resolution and the G64S fidelity mutant of 3D(pol) at a 3.0-A resolution. In the 3CD structure, the 3C and 3D domains are joined by a poorly ordered polypeptide linker, possibly to facilitate its cleavage, in an arrangement that precludes intramolecular proteolysis. The polymerase active site is intact in both the 3CD and the 3D(pol) G64S structures, despite the disruption of a network proposed to position key residues in the active site. Therefore, changes in molecular flexibility may be responsible for the differences in fidelity and polymerase activities. Extensive packing contacts between symmetry-related 3CD molecules and the approach of the 3C domain's N terminus to the VPg binding site suggest how 3D(pol) makes biologically relevant interactions with the 3C, 3CD, and 3BCD proteins that control the uridylylation of VPg during the initiation of viral replication. Indeed, mutations designed to disrupt these interfaces have pronounced effects on the uridylylation reaction in vitro.