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. 1994 Jan;68(1):555-60.
doi: 10.1128/JVI.68.1.555-560.1994.

Effect of vesicular stomatitis virus matrix protein on host-directed translation in vivo

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Effect of vesicular stomatitis virus matrix protein on host-directed translation in vivo

B L Black et al. J Virol. 1994 Jan.

Abstract

Vesicular stomatitis virus infection causes a rapid and potent inhibition of both host transcription and translation. Recently, the viral matrix (M) protein was shown to inhibit host-directed transcription in vivo in the absence of any other viral component (B. L. Black and D. S. Lyles, J. Virol. 66:4058-4064, 1992). The goal of this study was to determine the effect of M protein on host-directed translation. In vitro-transcribed mRNAs encoding M protein and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) were cotransfected into BHK cells to determine the effect of M protein expression on translation of CAT mRNA. The results presented here show that M protein did not inhibit host-directed translation of CAT mRNA. On the contrary, this study gave the unexpected result that M protein actually stimulated host-directed translation under the same conditions in which it potently inhibited host-directed transcription. Under these conditions, the combined effect on host gene expression was a greater-than-20-fold inhibition. Furthermore, the enhancement of host translation mediated by M protein was genetically correlated with M protein's ability to inhibit host transcription. Thus, the results of this study establish that M protein does not inhibit host protein synthesis under the same conditions in which it potently inhibits host transcription and suggest that the inhibition of transcription and that of translation by vesicular stomatitis virus require separate viral gene products.

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