Structure of the L Protein of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus from Electron Cryomicroscopy Bo Liang1, 3, 6, Zongli Li2, 4, 6, Simon Jenni3, 6, Amal A. Rahmeh1, Benjamin M. Morin1, Timothy Grant5, Nikolaus Grigorieff5, Stephen C. Harrison3, 4, Sean P.J. Whelan1, , The large (L) proteins of non-segmented, negative-strand RNA viruses, a group that includes Ebola and rabies viruses, catalyze RNA-dependent RNA polymerization with viral ribonucleoprotein as template, a non-canonical sequence of capping and methylation reactions, and polyadenylation of viral messages. We have determined by electron cryomicroscopy the structure of the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) L protein. The density map, at a resolution of 3.8 Å, has led to an atomic model for nearly all of the 2109-residue polypeptide chain, which comprises three enzymatic domains (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase [RdRp], polyribonucleotidyl transferase [PRNTase], and methyltransferase) and two structural domains. The RdRp resembles the corresponding enzymatic regions of dsRNA virus polymerases and influenza virus polymerase. A loop from the PRNTase (capping) domain projects into the catalytic site of the RdRp, where it appears to have the role of a priming loop and to couple product elongation to large-scale conformational changes in L. http://www.sciencedirect.com/sci ... i/S0092867415007023 |
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