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The ectodomain of HIV-1 env subunit gp41 forms a soluble, alpha-helical, rod-like oligomer in the absence of gp120 and the N-terminal fusion peptide.
Authors:W Weissenhorn  S A Wharton  L J Calder  P L Earl  B Moss  E Aliprandis  J J Skehel  and D C Wiley
Institution:Laboratory of Molecular Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Children''s Hospital, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Abstract:The human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein is composed of a soluble glycopolypeptide gp120 and a transmembrane glycopolypeptide gp41. These subunits form non-covalently linked oligomers on the surface of infected cells, virions and cells transfected with the complete env gene. Two length variants of the extracellular domain of gp41 (aa 21-166 and aa 39-166), that both lack the N-terminal fusion peptide and the C-terminal membrane anchor and cytoplasmic domain, have been expressed in insect cells to yield soluble oligomeric gp41 proteins. Oligomerization was confirmed by chemical cross-linking and gel filtration. Electron microscopy and circular dichroism measurements indicate a rod-like molecule with a high alpha-helical content and a high melting temperature (78 degrees C). The binding of monoclonal antibody Fab fragments dramatically increased the solubility of both gp41 constructs. We propose that gp41 folds into its membrane fusion-active conformation, when expressed alone.
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