Journal article

A hydrophobic domain in the large envelope protein is essential for fusion of duck hepatitis B virus at the late endosome

J Chojnacki, DA Anderson, EVL Grgacic

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY | AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY | Published : 2005

Abstract

The duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) envelope is comprised of two transmembrane (TM) proteins, the large (L) and the small (S), that assemble into virions and subviral particles. Secondary-structure predictions indicate that L and S have three alpha-helical, membrane-spanning domains, with TM1 predicted to act as the fusion peptide following endocytosis of DHBV into the hepatocyte. We used bafilomycin A1 during infection of primary duck hepatocytes to show that DHBV must be trafficked from the early to the late endosome for fusion to occur. Alanine substitution mutations in TM1 of L and S, which lowered TM1 hydrophobicity, were used to examine the role of TM1 in infectivity. The high hydrophobi..

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University of Melbourne Researchers