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Conformation and Trimer Association of the Transmembrane Domain of the Parainfluenza Virus Fusion Protein in Lipid Bilayers from Solid-State NMR: Insights into the Sequence Determinants of Trimer Structure and Fusion Activity
Authors:Myungwoon Lee  Hongwei Yao  Byungsu Kwon  Alan J. Waring  Peter Ruchala  Chandan Singh  Mei Hong
Affiliation:1. Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 170 Albany Street, Cambridge, MA 02139, United States;2. Department of Medicine, Harbor-UCLA - LA BioMed, Torrance, CA 90502, United States;3. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90024, United States
Abstract:Enveloped viruses enter cells by using their fusion proteins to merge the virus lipid envelope and the cell membrane. While crystal structures of the water-soluble ectodomains of many viral fusion proteins have been determined, the structure and assembly of the C-terminal transmembrane domain (TMD) remains poorly understood. Here we use solid-state NMR to determine the backbone conformation and oligomeric structure of the TMD of the parainfluenza virus 5 fusion protein. 13C chemical shifts indicate that the central leucine-rich segment of the TMD is α-helical in POPC/cholesterol membranes and POPE membranes, while the Ile- and Val-rich termini shift to the β-strand conformation in the POPE membrane. Importantly, lipid mixing assays indicate that the TMD is more fusogenic in the POPE membrane than in the POPC/cholesterol membrane, indicating that the β-strand conformation is important for fusion by inducing membrane curvature. Incorporation of para-fluorinated Phe at three positions of the α-helical core allowed us to measure interhelical distances using 19F spin diffusion NMR. The data indicate that, at peptide:lipid molar ratios of ~ 1:15, the TMD forms a trimeric helical bundle with inter-helical distances of 8.2–8.4 Å for L493F and L504F and 10.5 Å for L500F. These data provide high-resolution evidence of trimer formation of a viral fusion protein TMD in phospholipid bilayers, and indicate that the parainfluenza virus 5 fusion protein TMD harbors two functions: the central α-helical core is the trimerization unit of the protein, while the two termini are responsible for inducing membrane curvature by transitioning to a β-sheet conformation.
Keywords:magic-angle-spinning NMR  trimer formation  conformational plasticity  spin diffusion  TMD  transmembrane domain  PIV5  parainfluenza virus 5  FP  fusion peptide  CODEX  Centerband-Only Detection of Exchange  magic angle spinning  MAS
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