Elsevier

Virology

Volume 349, Issue 2, 5 June 2006, Pages 245-253
Virology

Rapid Communication
A single amino acid substitution in the central portion of the West Nile virus NS4B protein confers a highly attenuated phenotype in mice

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2006.03.007Get rights and content
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Abstract

West Nile virus (WNV) NS4B is a small hydrophobic nonstructural protein that is hypothesized to participate both in viral replication and evasion of host innate immune defenses. The protein has four cysteine residues (residues 102, 120, 227, and 237). Since cysteines are often critical for the function of proteins, each of the four cysteine residues found in WNV NS4B was mutated to serine by site-directed mutagenesis. While three of these substitutions had little effect on replication or mouse virulence phenotypes, the C102S mutation was associated with a temperature-sensitive phenotype at 41 °C as well as attenuation of the neuroinvasive and neurovirulence phenotypes in mice.

Keywords

West Nile virus
Flavivirus
NS4B protein
Attenuated phenotype
Cysteine

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