West Nile Virus 5′-Cap Structure Is Formed by Sequential Guanine N-7 and Ribose 2′-O Methylations by Nonstructural Protein 5

Debashish Ray(New York State Department of Health), Aaloki Shah(New York State Department of Health), Mark Tilgner(New York State Department of Health), Yi Guo(New York State Department of Health), Yiwei Zhao(New York State Department of Health), Hongping Dong(New York State Department of Health), Tia S. Deas(Albany State University), Yangsheng Zhou(Albany State University), Hongmin Li(Albany State University), Pei‐Yong Shi(Albany State University)
Journal of Virology
August 15, 2006
Cited by 382Open Access
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Abstract

Many flaviviruses are globally important human pathogens. Their plus-strand RNA genome contains a 5'-cap structure that is methylated at the guanine N-7 and the ribose 2'-OH positions of the first transcribed nucleotide, adenine (m(7)GpppAm). Using West Nile virus (WNV), we demonstrate, for the first time, that the nonstructural protein 5 (NS5) mediates both guanine N-7 and ribose 2'-O methylations and therefore is essential for flavivirus 5'-cap formation. We show that a recombinant full-length and a truncated NS5 protein containing the methyltransferase (MTase) domain methylates GpppA-capped and m(7)GpppA-capped RNAs to m(7)GpppAm-RNA, using S-adenosylmethionine as a methyl donor. Furthermore, methylation of GpppA-capped RNA sequentially yielded m(7)GpppA- and m(7)GpppAm-RNA products, indicating that guanine N-7 precedes ribose 2'-O methylation. Mutagenesis of a K(61)-D(146)-K(182)-E(218) tetrad conserved in other cellular and viral MTases suggests that NS5 requires distinct amino acids for its N-7 and 2'-O MTase activities. The entire K(61)-D(146)-K(182)-E(218) motif is essential for 2'-O MTase activity, whereas N-7 MTase activity requires only D(146). The other three amino acids facilitate, but are not essential for, guanine N-7 methylation. Amino acid substitutions within the K(61)-D(146)-K(182)-E(218) motif in a WNV luciferase-reporting replicon significantly reduced or abolished viral replication in cells. Additionally, the mutant MTase-mediated replication defect could not be trans complemented by a wild-type replicase complex. These findings demonstrate a critical role for the flavivirus MTase in viral reproduction and underscore this domain as a potential target for antiviral therapy.


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