Data from: Manipulation of the N-terminal sequence of the Borna disease virus X protein improves its mitochondrial targeting and neuroprotective potential
To favor their replication, viruses express proteins that target diverse mammalian cellular pathways. Due to the limited size of many viral genomes, such proteins are endowed with multiple functions, which require targeting to different subcellular compartments. One salient example is the X protein...
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Zusammenfassung: | To favor their replication, viruses express proteins that target diverse
mammalian cellular pathways. Due to the limited size of many viral
genomes, such proteins are endowed with multiple functions, which require
targeting to different subcellular compartments. One salient example is
the X protein of Borna disease virus, which is expressed both at the
mitochondria and in the nucleus. Moreover, we recently demonstrated that
mitochondrial X protein is neuroprotective. In this study, we sought to
examine the mechanisms whereby the X protein transits between subcellular
compartments and to define its localization signals, to enhance its
mitochondrial accumulation and thus, potentially, its neuroprotective
activity. We transfected plasmids expressing fusion proteins bearing
different domains of X fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP)
and compared their subcellular localization to that of eGFP. We observed
that the 5–16 domain of X was responsible for both nuclear export and
mitochondrial targeting and identified critical residues for mitochondrial
localization. We next took advantage of these findings and constructed
mutant X proteins that were targeted only to the mitochondria. Such
mutants exhibited enhanced neuroprotective properties in compartmented
cultures of neurons grown in microfluidic chambers, thereby confirming the
parallel between mitochondrial accumulation of the X protein and its
neuroprotective potential. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1rs12 |