Author: Mavrakis, Manos; McCarthy, Andrew A.; Roche, Stéphane; Blondel, Danielle; Ruigrok, Rob W.H.
                    Title: Structure and Function of the C-terminal Domain of the Polymerase Cofactor of Rabies Virus  Cord-id: 0ia91j2b  Document date: 2004_10_29
                    ID: 0ia91j2b
                    
                    Snippet: The phosphoprotein (P) of rabies virus binds the viral polymerase to the nucleoprotein (N)-RNA template for transcription and replication. By limited protease digestion we defined a monomeric C-terminal domain of P that can bind to N-RNA. The atomic structure of this domain was determined and previously described mutations that interfere with binding of P to N-RNA could now be interpreted. There appears to be two features involved in this activity situated at opposite surfaces of the molecule: a
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: The phosphoprotein (P) of rabies virus binds the viral polymerase to the nucleoprotein (N)-RNA template for transcription and replication. By limited protease digestion we defined a monomeric C-terminal domain of P that can bind to N-RNA. The atomic structure of this domain was determined and previously described mutations that interfere with binding of P to N-RNA could now be interpreted. There appears to be two features involved in this activity situated at opposite surfaces of the molecule: a positively charged patch and a hydrophobic pocket with an exposed tryptophan side-chain. Other previously published work suggests a conformational change in P when it binds to N-RNA, which may imply the repositioning of two helices that would expose a hydrophobic groove for interaction with N. This domain of rabies virus P is structurally unrelated to the N-RNA binding domains of the phosphoproteins of Sendai and measles virus that are members of the same order of viruses, the non-segmented negative strand RNA viruses. The implications of this finding for the evolution of this virus group are discussed.
 
  Search related documents: 
                                
                                Co phrase  search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date