Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.

Coronavirus envelope E protein plays an important role in the virus assembly and morphogenesis. Despite of little sequence homology among the coronavirus E protein family, two or three cysteines located near the C-terminal side of the transmembrane domain are conserved in all E proteins. Infectious...

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Main Author: Huang, Lu.
Other Authors: Jaume Torres
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2010
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39619
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-396192023-02-28T18:00:07Z Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization. Huang, Lu. Jaume Torres School of Biological Sciences DRNTU::Science Coronavirus envelope E protein plays an important role in the virus assembly and morphogenesis. Despite of little sequence homology among the coronavirus E protein family, two or three cysteines located near the C-terminal side of the transmembrane domain are conserved in all E proteins. Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) has one of the longest coronavirus E proteins with108 amino acid residues and a molecular weight of 12.3 kD. It is also distinctive by having only two conserved cysteines while most other coronavirus E proteins have three. In this study, to facilitate the expression and purification process, IBV E has been fused with a modified β-barrel platform protein. The fusion protein was expressed in E. coli, recovered from inclusion bodies, cleaved by CNBr and IBV E was purified by HPLC. It is the first time to express and purify IBV E and analyze its secondary structure and oligomerization. Gel electrophoresis revealed that IBV E forms mostly monomer in SDS and pentamer in milder detergent PFO. AUC analysis of IBV E in C14 betaine revealed good fitting for monomer-pentamer model. Analysis using ATR-FTIR revealed strikingly high percentage of residues protected from H/D exchange, providing clue for the IBV E membrane topology. Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences 2010-06-01T08:51:05Z 2010-06-01T08:51:05Z 2010 2010 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39619 en Nanyang Technological University 35 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Huang, Lu.
Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
description Coronavirus envelope E protein plays an important role in the virus assembly and morphogenesis. Despite of little sequence homology among the coronavirus E protein family, two or three cysteines located near the C-terminal side of the transmembrane domain are conserved in all E proteins. Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) has one of the longest coronavirus E proteins with108 amino acid residues and a molecular weight of 12.3 kD. It is also distinctive by having only two conserved cysteines while most other coronavirus E proteins have three. In this study, to facilitate the expression and purification process, IBV E has been fused with a modified β-barrel platform protein. The fusion protein was expressed in E. coli, recovered from inclusion bodies, cleaved by CNBr and IBV E was purified by HPLC. It is the first time to express and purify IBV E and analyze its secondary structure and oligomerization. Gel electrophoresis revealed that IBV E forms mostly monomer in SDS and pentamer in milder detergent PFO. AUC analysis of IBV E in C14 betaine revealed good fitting for monomer-pentamer model. Analysis using ATR-FTIR revealed strikingly high percentage of residues protected from H/D exchange, providing clue for the IBV E membrane topology.
author2 Jaume Torres
author_facet Jaume Torres
Huang, Lu.
format Final Year Project
author Huang, Lu.
author_sort Huang, Lu.
title Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
title_short Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
title_full Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
title_fullStr Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
title_full_unstemmed Role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
title_sort role of cysteines in infectious bronchitis virus envelope protein oligomerization.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39619
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