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Virus Research 1991-May

The nucleotide and predicted amino acid sequence of the attachment protein of canine distemper virus.

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J Kövamees
M Blixenkrone-Möller
E Norrby

Anahtar kelimeler

Öz

The nucleotide sequence of the gene coding for the attachment protein of the Convac strain of the canine distemper virus (CDV), corresponding to the haemagglutinin (H) gene of measles virus was determined using a mRNA-derived cDNA clone and genomic viral RNA. The mRNA transcribed from the CDV H gene is 1944 nucleotides long excluding the polyadenylated tail. Only one long open reading frame was found comprising nucleotides 21-1841. The predicted protein has a single hydrophobic region which can serve as a membrane anchoring domain. The deduced 607 amino acids would code for a protein of 68,247 Da, to be compared with an approximate protein molecular weight in SDS-PAGE of the glycosylated protein, which is 85,000 Da. The CDV H protein exhibited seven potential N-linked glycosylation sites. These were concentrated to the carboxyterminal part of the CDV H protein and differed markedly from measles virus (MV) and rinderpest virus (RPV) where the potential sites were mostly conserved and located in the amino-terminal half of the proteins. In spite of the differences in amino acid composition of these three H proteins their hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity plots were closely similar with the major hydrophobic region at an identical location. All the 12 cysteine residues found in the CDV H protein were conserved in MV and RPV. The amino acid homology between CDV and MV H protein was 37% and between CDV and RPV H protein 38%. The fact that the corresponding homology between the MV and RPV proteins is almost 60% shows that the evolutionary separation between CDV and RPV occurred at a much earlier time than the separation between RPV and MV.

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