4.6 Article

Site-specific S-Acylation of Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin THE LOCATION OF THE ACYLATION SITE RELATIVE TO THE MEMBRANE BORDER IS THE DECISIVE FACTOR FOR ATTACHMENT OF STEARATE

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 50, Pages 34978-34989

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.586180

Keywords

Fatty Acid; Glycoprotein; Influenza Virus; Mass Spectrometry (MS); Protein Acylation; Protein Palmitoylation; Transmembrane Domain; Hemagglutinin; Palmitate; Stearate

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [Ve 141/10]
  2. Priority Program 1175
  3. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [13-04-00290, 14-04-01693]

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Background:S-Acylation of hemagglutinin with stearate and palmitate is essential for influenza virus replication. Results: Mass spectrometry showed that shifting a cysteine from the transmembrane region to a cytoplasmic position eliminates attachment of stearate. Conclusion: The location of the acylation site is the decisive factor for site-specific acylation. Significance: Similar differential acylation might occur in cellular transmembrane proteins. S-Acylation of hemagglutinin (HA), the main glycoprotein of influenza viruses, is an essential modification required for virus replication. Using mass spectrometry, we have previously demonstrated specific attachment of acyl chains to individual acylation sites. Whereas the two cysteines in the cytoplasmic tail of HA contain only palmitate, stearate is exclusively attached to a cysteine positioned at the end of the transmembrane region (TMR). Here we analyzed recombinant viruses containing HA with exchange of conserved amino acids adjacent to acylation sites or with a TMR cysteine shifted to a cytoplasmic location to identify the molecular signal that determines preferential attachment of stearate. We first developed a new protocol for sample preparation that requires less material and might thus also be suitable to analyze cellular proteins. We observed cell type-specific differences in the fatty acid pattern of HA: more stearate was attached if human viruses were grown in mammalian compared with avian cells. No underacylated peptides were detected in the mass spectra, and even mutations that prevented generation of infectious virus particles did not abolish acylation of expressed HA as demonstrated by metabolic labeling experiments with [H-3]palmitate. Exchange of conserved amino acids in the vicinity of an acylation site had a moderate effect on the stearate content. In contrast, shifting the TMR cysteine to a cytoplasmic location virtually eliminated attachment of stearate. Thus, the location of an acylation site relative to the transmembrane span is the main signal for stearate attachment, but the sequence context and the cell type modulate the fatty acid pattern.

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