Fusion proteins from a group of widely disparate viruses, including the paramyxovirus F protein, the HIV and SIV gp160 proteins, the retroviral Env protein, the Ebola virus Gp, and the influenza virus haemagglutinin, share a number of common features. All contain multiple glycosylation sites, and must be trimeric and undergo proteolytic cleavage to be fusogenically active. Subsequent to proteolytic cleavage, the subunit containing the transmembrane domain in each case has an extremely hydrophobic region, termed the fusion peptide, or at near its newly generated N-terminus. In addition, all of these viral fusion proteins have 4–3 heptad repeat sequences near both the fusion peptide and the transmembrane domain. These regions have been demonstrated from a tight complex, in which the N-terminal heptad repeat forms a trimeric-coiled coil, with the C-terminal heptad repeat forming helical regions that buttress the coiled-coil in an anti-parallel manner. The significance of each of these structuralelements in the processing and function of these viral fusion proteins is discussed.
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December 01 2000
Virus Membrane Fusion Proteins: Biological Machines that Undergo a Metamorphosis Available to Purchase
Rebecca Ellis Dutch;
Rebecca Ellis Dutch
1Department of Biochemistry, University of Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky, 40536
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Theodore S. Jardetzky;
Theodore S. Jardetzky
2Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Cell Biology, U.S.A
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Robert A. Lamb
Robert A. Lamb
3Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 60208-3500
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Online ISSN: 1573-4935
Print ISSN: 0144-8463
© 2000 Plenum Publishing Corporation
2000
Biosci Rep (2000) 20 (6): 597–612.
Citation
Rebecca Ellis Dutch, Theodore S. Jardetzky, Robert A. Lamb; Virus Membrane Fusion Proteins: Biological Machines that Undergo a Metamorphosis. Biosci Rep 1 December 2000; 20 (6): 597–612. doi: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010467106305
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