Localization of the Tomato Bushy Stunt Virus Replication Protein p33 Reveals a Peroxisome-to-Endoplasmic Reticulum Sorting Pathway[W]

  • Andrew W. McCartney
    Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology  University of Guelph  Guelph  Ontario N1G 2W1  Canada
  • John S. Greenwood
    Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology  University of Guelph  Guelph  Ontario N1G 2W1  Canada
  • Marc R. Fabian
    Department of Biology  York University  Toronto  Ontario M3J 1P3  Canada
  • K. Andrew White
    Department of Biology  York University  Toronto  Ontario M3J 1P3  Canada
  • Robert T. Mullen
    Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology  University of Guelph  Guelph  Ontario N1G 2W1  Canada

説明

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV), a positive-strand RNA virus, causes extensive inward vesiculations of the peroxisomal boundary membrane and formation of peroxisomal multivesicular bodies (pMVBs). Although pMVBs are known to contain protein components of the viral membrane-bound RNA replication complex, the mechanisms of protein targeting to peroxisomal membranes and participation in pMVB biogenesis are not well understood. We show that the TBSV 33-kD replication protein (p33), expressed on its own, targets initially from the cytosol to peroxisomes, causing their progressive aggregation and eventually the formation of peroxisomal ghosts. These altered peroxisomes are distinct from pMVBs; they lack internal vesicles and are surrounded by novel cytosolic vesicles that contain p33 and appear to be derived from evaginations of the peroxisomal boundary membrane. Concomitant with these changes in peroxisomes, p33 and resident peroxisomal membrane proteins are relocalized to the peroxisomal endoplasmic reticulum (pER) subdomain. This sorting of p33 is disrupted by the coexpression of a dominant-negative mutant of ADP-ribosylation factor1, implicating coatomer in vesicle formation at peroxisomes. Mutational analysis of p33 revealed that its intracellular sorting is also mediated by several targeting signals, including three peroxisomal targeting elements that function cooperatively, plus a pER targeting signal resembling an Arg-based motif responsible for vesicle-mediated retrieval of escaped ER membrane proteins from the Golgi. These results provide insight into virus-induced intracellular rearrangements and reveal a peroxisome-to-pER sorting pathway, raising new mechanistic questions regarding the biogenesis of peroxisomes in plants.</jats:p>

収録刊行物

  • The Plant Cell

    The Plant Cell 17 (12), 3513-3531, 2005-11-11

    Oxford University Press (OUP)

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