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Sep. 10, 2014:
A total of 174 experimentally verified S-nitrosylation sites on 94 S-nitrosylated proteins from individualized human colorectal cancer tissues using a label-free quantitation strategy.

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Protein Name: Structural polyprotein

UniprotKB/SwissProt ID: P13890 (P13890)

Gene Name:

Organism: Ross river virus (strain NB5092) (RRV)

Function: Forms an icosahedral capsid with a T=4 symmetry composed of 240 copies of the capsid protein surrounded by a lipid membrane through which penetrate 80 spikes composed of trimers of E1-E2 heterodimers (By similarity). The capsid protein binds to the viral RNA genome at a site adjacent to a ribosome binding site for viral genome translation following genome release (By similarity). Possesses a protease activity that results in its autocatalytic cleavage from the nascent structural protein (By similarity). Following its self-cleavage, the capsid protein transiently associates with ribosomes, and within several minutes the protein binds to viral RNA and rapidly assembles into icosahedric core particles (By similarity). The resulting nucleocapsid eventually associates with the cytoplasmic domain of the spike glycoprotein E2 at the cell membrane, leading to budding and formation of mature virions (By similarity). In case of infection, new virions attach to target cells and after clathrin-mediated endocytosis their membrane fuses with the host endosomal membrane (By similarity). This leads to the release of the nucleocapsid into the cytoplasm, followed by an uncoating event necessary for the genomic RNA to become accessible (By similarity). The uncoating might be triggered by the interaction of capsid proteins with ribosomes (By similarity). Binding of ribosomes would release the genomic RNA since the same region is genomic RNA-binding and ribosome-binding (By similarity). Specifically inhibits interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase 1/IRAK1-dependent signaling during viral entry, representing a means by which the alphaviruses may evade innate immune detection and activation prior to viral gene expression (By similarity) Provides the signal sequence for the translocation of the precursor of protein E3/E2 to the host endoplasmic reticulum. Furin-cleaved E3 remains associated with spike glycoprotein E1 and mediates pH protection of the latter during the transport via the secretory pathway. After virion release from the host cell, the assembly protein E3 is gradually released in the extracellular space Plays a role in viral attachment to target host cell, by binding to the cell receptor MXRA8 (By similarity). The host LDLR may also act as a cell receptor for viral entry (By similarity). Synthesized as a p62 precursor which is processed by furin at the cell membrane just before virion budding, giving rise to E2-E1 heterodimer. The p62-E1 heterodimer is stable, whereas E2-E1 is unstable and dissociate at low pH. p62 is processed at the last step, presumably to avoid E1 fusion activation before its final export to cell surface. E2 C-terminus contains a transitory transmembrane that would be disrupted by palmitoylation, resulting in reorientation of the C-terminal tail from lumenal to cytoplasmic side. This step is critical since E2 C-terminus is involved in budding by interacting with capsid proteins. This release of E2 C-terminus in cytoplasm occurs lately in protein export, and precludes premature assembly of particles at the endoplasmic reticulum membrane (By similarity) Acts as a viroporin that participates in virus glycoprotein processing and transport to the plasma membrane, cell permeabilization and budding of viral particles (By similarity). The cation channel is permeable to Na(+)>K(+)>Ca(2+) in vitro (By similarity). Disrupts the calcium homeostasis of the cell, probably at the endoplasmic reticulum level (By similarity). This leads to cytoplasmic calcium elevation (By similarity). Because of its lipophilic properties, the 6K protein is postulated to influence the selection of lipids that interact with the transmembrane domains of the glycoproteins, which, in turn, affects the deformability of the bilayer required for the extreme curvature that occurs as budding proceeds. Present in low amount in virions, about 3% compared to viral glycoproteins (By similarity) Class II viral fusion protein. Fusion activity is inactive as long as E1 is bound to E2 in mature virion. After virus attachment to target cell via host MXRA8 and endocytosis, acidification of the endosome induce dissociation of E1/E2 heterodimer and concomitant trimerization of the E1 subunits. This E1 trimer is fusion active, and promotes release of viral nucleocapsid in cytoplasm after endosome and viral membrane fusion. Efficient fusion requires the presence of cholesterol and sphingolipid in the target membrane

Other Modifications: View all modification sites in dbPTM

Protein Subcellular Localization: Virion. Host cytoplasm. Host cell membrane. Host nucleus. Virion membrane. Host cell membrane. Host cell membrane. Virion membrane. Host Golgi apparatus. Host Golgi apparatus, host trans-Golgi network. Host endoplasmic reticulum. Virion membrane. Host cell membrane

Graphical Visualization of S-nitrosylation Sites:
InterPro ID Domain Name
IPR002548 Alpha_E1_glycop
IPR000936 Alpha_E2_glycop
IPR002533 Alpha_E3_glycop
IPR042304 Alphavir_E2_A
IPR042305 Alphavir_E2_B
IPR042306 Alphavir_E2_C
IPR000336 Flavivir/Alphavir_Ig-like_sf
IPR036253 Glycoprot_cen/dimer_sf
IPR038055 Glycoprot_E_dimer_dom
IPR014756 Ig_E-set
IPR009003 Peptidase_S1_PA
IPR043504 Peptidase_S1_PA_chymotrypsin
IPR000930 Peptidase_S3