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Basic Characteristics of Mutations
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Mutation Site
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H19Y |
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Mutation Site Sentence
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Specifically, the following mutants were constructed in the maRAVV VP40 cDNA: H7Y, H19Y, A57V, A165T, N184D, and an S189N/A190T double mutant. |
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Mutation Level
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Amino acid level |
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Mutation Type
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Nonsynonymous substitution |
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Gene/Protein/Region
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VP40 |
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Standardized Encoding Gene
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VP40
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Genotype/Subtype
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Musoke |
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Viral Reference
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NC001608
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Functional Impact and Mechanisms
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Disease
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Cell line
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Immune
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- |
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Target Gene
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JAK1
STAT1
STAT2
IFNA1
IFNB1
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Clinical and Epidemiological Correlations
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Clinical Information
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- |
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Treatment
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- |
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Location
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- |
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Literature Information
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PMID
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21325424
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Title
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Marburg virus VP40 antagonizes interferon signaling in a species-specific manner
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Author
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Valmas C,Basler CF
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Journal
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Journal of virology
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Journal Info
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2011 May;85(9):4309-17
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Abstract
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Marburgviruses are zoonotic pathogens that cause lethal hemorrhagic fever in humans and nonhuman primates. However, they do not cause lethal disease in immunocompetent mice unless they are adapted to this species. The adaptation process can therefore provide insight into the specific virus-host interactions that determine virulence. In primate cells, the Lake Victoria marburgvirus Musoke strain (MARV) VP40 matrix protein antagonizes alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) and IFN-gamma signaling by inhibiting the activation of the cellular tyrosine kinase Jak1. Here, VP40 from the Ravn strain (RAVV VP40)-from a distinct Marburg virus clade-is demonstrated to also inhibit IFN signaling in human cells. However, neither MARV nor RAVV VP40 effectively inhibited IFN-signaling in mouse cells, as assessed by assays of the antiviral effects of IFN-alpha/beta and the IFN-alpha/beta-induced phosphorylation of Jak1, STAT1, and STAT2. In contrast, the VP40 from a mouse-adapted RAVV (maRAVV) did inhibit IFN signaling. Effective Jak1 inhibition correlated with the species from which the cells were derived and did not depend upon whether Jak1 was of human or mouse origin. Of the seven amino acid changes that accumulated in VP40 during mouse adaptation, two (V57A and T165A) are sufficient to allow efficient IFN signaling antagonism by RAVV VP40 in mouse cells. The same two changes also confer efficient IFN antagonist function upon MARV VP40 in mouse cells. The mouse-adaptive changes did not affect the budding of RAVV VP40 in mouse cells, suggesting that this second major function of VP40 did not undergo adaptation. These data identify an apparent determinant of RAVV host range and virulence and define specific genetic determinants of this function.
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Sequence Data
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-
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