5-Dialkylaminosulfonylisatins have been identified as potent, nonpeptide inhibitors of caspases 3 and 7. The most active compound within this series (34) inhibited caspases 3 and 7 in the 2-6 nM range and exhibited approximately 1000-fold selectivity for caspases 3 and 7 versus a panel of five other caspases (1, 2, 4, 6, and 8) and was at least 20-fold more selective versus caspase 9. Sequence alignments of the active site residues of the caspases strongly suggest that the basis of this selectivity is due to binding in the S2 subsite comprised of residues Tyr204, Trp206, and Phe256 which are unique to caspases 3 and 7. These compounds inhibit apoptosis in three cell-based models: human Jurkat T cells, human chondrocytes, and mouse bone marrow neutrophils.
Mutating RNA virus genomes to alter codon pair (CP) frequencies and reduce
translation efficiency has been advocated as a method to generate safe, attenuated
virus vaccines. However, selection for disfavoured CPs leads to unintended increases
in CpG and UpA dinucleotide frequencies that also attenuate replication. We designed
and phenotypically characterised mutants of the picornavirus, echovirus 7, in which
these parameters were independently varied to determine which most influenced virus
replication. CpG and UpA dinucleotide frequencies primarily influenced virus
replication ability while no fitness differences were observed between mutants with
different CP usage where dinucleotide frequencies were kept constant. Contrastingly,
translation efficiency was unaffected by either CP usage or dinucleotide frequencies.
This mechanistic insight is critical for future rational design of live virus
vaccines and their safety evaluation; attenuation is mediated through enhanced innate
immune responses to viruses with elevated CpG/UpA dinucleotide frequencies rather the
viruses themselves being intrinsically defective.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.04531.001
Expression of viral proteins frequently includes non-canonical decoding events (‘recoding’) during translation. ‘2A’ oligopeptides drive one such event, termed ‘stop-carry on’ recoding. Nascent 2A peptides interact with the ribosomal exit tunnel to dictate an unusual stop codon-independent termination of translation at the final Pro codon of 2A. Subsequently, translation ‘reinitiates’ on the same codon, two individual proteins being generated from one open reading frame. Many 2A peptides have been identified, and they have a conserved C-terminal motif. Little similarity is present in the N-terminal portions of these peptides, which might suggest that these amino acids are not important in the 2A reaction. However, mutagenesis indicates that identity of the amino acid at nearly all positions of a single 2A peptide is important for activity. Each 2A may then represent a specific solution for positioning the conserved C-terminus within the peptidyl-transferase centre to promote recoding. Nascent 2A peptide:ribosome interactions are suggested to alter ribosomal fine structure to discriminate against prolyl-tRNAPro and promote termination in the absence of a stop codon. Such structural modifications may account for our observation that replacement of the final Pro codon of 2A with any stop codon both stalls ribosome processivity and inhibits nascent chain release.
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