Proteomic analysis on structural proteins of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus

Wantao Ying(Beijing Radiation Center), Yunwei Hao(Beijing Radiation Center), Yangjun Zhang(Beijing Radiation Center), Wenming Peng(Institute of Microbiology), E-De Qin(Institute of Microbiology), Yun Cai(Beijing Radiation Center), Kaihua Wei(National Center of Biomedical Analysis), Jie Wang(National Center of Biomedical Analysis), Guohui Chang(Institute of Microbiology), Wei Sun(Beijing Radiation Center), Shujia Dai(Beijing Radiation Center), Xiaohai Li(Beijing Radiation Center), Yunping Zhu(Beijing Radiation Center), Jianqi Li(Beijing Radiation Center), Songfeng Wu(Beijing Radiation Center), Lihai Guo(Beijing Radiation Center), Jingquan Dai(Beijing Radiation Center), Jinglan Wang(National Center of Biomedical Analysis), Ping Wan(Beijing Radiation Center), Tinggui Chen(Beijing Radiation Center), Chun-Juan Du(Beijing Radiation Center), Dong Li(Beijing Radiation Center), Jia Wan(Beijing Radiation Center), Xuezhang Kuai(Beijing Radiation Center), Weihua Li(National Center of Biomedical Analysis), Rong Shi(Beijing Radiation Center), Handong Wei(Beijing Radiation Center), Cheng Cao, Man Yu(Institute of Microbiology), Hong Liu(Institute of Microbiology), Fangting Dong(National Center of Biomedical Analysis), Donggen Wang(Beijing Radiation Center), Xuemin Zhang(National Center of Biomedical Analysis), Xiaohong Qian(Beijing Radiation Center), Qingyu Zhu(Institute of Microbiology), Fuchu He(Beijing Radiation Center)
PROTEOMICS
January 29, 2004
Cited by 93Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Recently, a new coronavirus was isolated from the lung tissue of autopsy sample and nasal/throat swabs of the patients with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and the causative association with SARS was determined. To reveal further the characteristics of the virus and to provide insight about the molecular mechanism of SARS etiology, a proteomic strategy was utilized to identify the structural proteins of SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV) isolated from Vero E6 cells infected with the BJ-01 strain of the virus. At first, Western blotting with the convalescent sera from SARS patients demonstrated that there were various structural proteins of SARS-CoV in the cultured supernatant of virus infected-Vero E6 cells and that nucleocaspid (N) protein had a prominent immunogenicity to the convalescent sera from the patients with SARS, while the immune response of spike (S) protein probably binding with membrane (M) glycoprotein was much weaker. Then, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was used to separate the complex protein constituents, and the strategy of continuous slicing from loading well to the bottom of the gels was utilized to search thoroughly the structural proteins of the virus. The proteins in sliced slots were trypsinized in-gel and identified by mass spectrometry. Three structural proteins named S, N and M proteins of SARS-CoV were uncovered with the sequence coverage of 38.9, 93.1 and 28.1% respectively. Glycosylation modification in S protein was also analyzed and four glycosylation sites were discovered by comparing the mass spectra before and after deglycosylation of the peptides with PNGase F digestion. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry determination showed that relative molecular weight of intact N protein is 45 929 Da, which is very close to its theoretically calculated molecular weight 45 935 Da based on the amino acid sequence deduced from the genome with the first amino acid methionine at the N-terminus depleted and second, serine, acetylated, indicating that phosphorylation does not happen at all in the predicted phosphorylation sites within infected cells nor in virus particles. Intriguingly, a series of shorter isoforms of N protein was observed by SDS-PAGE and identified by mass spectrometry characterization. For further confirmation of this phenomenon and its related mechanism, recombinant N protein of SARS-CoV was cleaved in vitro by caspase-3 and -6 respectively. The results demonstrated that these shorter isoforms could be the products from cleavage of caspase-3 rather than that of caspase-6. Further, the relationship between the caspase cleavage and the viral infection to the host cell is discussed.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis