R. Bartenschlager et al., SUBSTRATE DETERMINANTS FOR CLEAVAGE IN CIS AND IN TRANS BY THE HEPATITIS-C VIRUS NS3 PROTEINASE, Journal of virology, 69(1), 1995, pp. 198-205
Processing of the hepatitis C virus polyprotein is accomplished by a s
eries of cotranslational and posttranslational cleavages mediated by h
ost cell signalases and two virally encoded proteinases. Of these the
NS3 proteinase is essential for processing at the NS3/4A, NS4A/4B, NS4
B/5A, and NS58/5B junctions. Processing between NS3 and NS4A occurs in
cis, implying an intramolecular reaction mechanism, whereas cleavage
at the other sites can also be mediated in trans. Sequence analysis of
the amino termini of mature cleavage products and comparisons of amin
o acid residues around the scissile bonds of various hepatitis C virus
isolates identified amino acid residues which might contribute to sub
strate specificity and processing efficiency: an acidic amino acid at
the P6 position, a Thr or Cys at the P1 position, and a Ser or Ala at
the P1' position. To study the importance of these residues for NS3-me
diated cleavage we have undertaken a mutational analysis using an NS3'
-5B polyprotein expressed by recombinant vaccinia viruses in mammalian
cells. For all NS3-dependent cleavage sites P1 substitutions had the
most drastic effects on cleavage efficiency, showing that amino acid r
esidues at this position are the most critical substrate determinants.
Since less drastic effects were found for substitutions at the P1' po
sition, these residues appear to be less important for proper cleavage
. For all cleavage sites the P6 acidic residue was dispensable, sugges
ting that it is not essential for substrate recognition and subsequent
cleavage. Analysis of a series of mutations at the NS3/4A site reveal
ed great flexibility for substitutions compared with more stringent re
quirements at the trans cleavage sites. On the basis of these results
we propose a model in which processing in cis is determined primarily
by polyprotein folding, whereas cleavage in trans is governed not only
by the structure of the polyprotein but also by specific interactions
between the proteinase and the polyprotein substrate at or around the
scissile bond.