1. Academic Validation
  2. NS1-Binding protein (NS1-BP): a novel human protein that interacts with the influenza A virus nonstructural NS1 protein is relocalized in the nuclei of infected cells

NS1-Binding protein (NS1-BP): a novel human protein that interacts with the influenza A virus nonstructural NS1 protein is relocalized in the nuclei of infected cells

  • J Virol. 1998 Sep;72(9):7170-80. doi: 10.1128/JVI.72.9.7170-7180.1998.
T Wolff 1 R E O'Neill P Palese
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Institut für Virologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, 35037 Marburg, Germany. [email protected]
Abstract

We used the yeast interaction trap system to identify a novel human 70-kDa protein, termed NS1-binding protein (NS1-BP), which interacts with the nonstructural NS1 protein of the influenza A virus. The genetic interaction was confirmed by the specific coprecipitation of the NS1 protein from solution by a glutathione S-transferase-NS1-BP fusion protein and glutathione-Sepharose. NS1-BP contains an N-terminal BTB/POZ domain and five kelch-like tandem repeat elements of approximately 50 Amino acids. In noninfected cells, affinity-purified Antibodies localized NS1-BP in nuclear regions enriched with the spliceosome assembly factor SC35, suggesting an association of NS1-BP with the cellular splicing apparatus. In influenza A virus-infected cells, NS1-BP relocalized throughout the nucleoplasm and appeared distinct from the SC35 domains, which suggests that NS1-BP function may be disturbed or altered. The addition of a truncated NS1-BP mutant protein to a HeLa cell nuclear extract efficiently inhibited pre-mRNA splicing but not spliceosome assembly. This result could be explained by a possible dominant-negative effect of the NS1-BP mutant protein and suggests a role of the wild-type NS1-BP in promoting pre-mRNA splicing. These data suggest that the inhibition of splicing by the NS1 protein may be mediated by binding to NS1-BP.

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