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1.
Core particles of hepatitis B virus are assembled from dimers of a single 185-residue (subtype adw) viral capsid or core protein (p21.5) which possesses two distinct domains: residues 1 to 144 form a minimal capsid assembly domain, and the arginine-rich, carboxyl-terminal residues 150 to 185 form a protamine-like domain that mediates nucleic acid binding. Little is known about the topography of the p21.5 polypeptide within either the p21.5 capsids or dimers. Here, using site-specific proteases and monoclonal antibodies, we have defined the accessibility of p21.5 residues in dimers and capsids assembled from wild-type and mutant hepatitis B virus core proteins in Xenopus oocytes and in vitro. The data reveal the protamine region to be accessible to external reagents in p21.5 dimers but largely cryptic in wild-type capsids. Strikingly, in capsids the only protease target region was a 9-residue peptide covering p21.5 residues Glu-145 to Asp-153, which falls largely between the two core protein domains. By analogy with protease-sensitive interdomain regions in other proteins, we propose that this peptide constitutes a hinge between the assembly and nucleic acid binding domains of p21.5. We further found that deletion or replacement of the terminal Cys-185 residue greatly increased surface exposure of the protamine tails in capsids, suggesting that a known disulfide linkage involving this residue tethers the protamine region inside the core particles. We propose that disruption of this disulfide linkage allows the protamine region to appear transiently on the surface of the core particle.  相似文献   

2.
In the spherical capsid of hepatitis B virus (HBV), intermolecular disulfide bonds cross-link the approximately 180 p21.5 capsid protein subunits into a stable lattice. In this study, we used mutant capsid proteins to investigate the role that disulfide bonds and the four p21.5 Cys residues (positions 48, 61, 107, and 185) play in capsid assembly and/or stabilization. p21.5 Cys residues were either replaced by Ala or removed (Cys-185) by carboxyl-terminal truncation, creating Cys-minus mutants which were expressed in Xenopus oocytes via microinjected synthetic mRNAs. Fractionation of radiolabeled oocyte extracts on 10 to 60% sucrose gradients revealed that Cys-minus core proteins resolved into the nonparticulate and capsid forms seen for wild-type p21.5. On 5 to 30% sucrose gradients, nonparticulate Cys-minus core proteins sedimented as dimers of approximately 40 kDa. We conclude that Cys residues and disulfides are not required for the assembly of either HBV capsids or the dimers that provide the precursors for capsid assembly. Since assembly presumably demands an appropriate p21.5 tertiary structure, it is unlikely that Cys residues are required for proper p21.5 folding. However, Cys residues stabilize isolated p21.5 structures, as evidenced by the marked reduction in stability of Cys-minus dimers and capsids (i) in nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and (ii) upon protease digestion. We discuss these results in the context of the HBV life cycle and the role of Cys residues in other proteins.  相似文献   

3.
S Zhou  S Q Yang    D N Standring 《Journal of virology》1992,66(5):3086-3092
Little is known about the assembly of the 28-nm nucleocapsid or core particle of hepatitis B virus. Here we show that this assembly process can be reconstituted in Xenopus oocytes injected with a synthetic mRNA encoding the hepatitis B virus capsid protein (p21.5). Injected oocytes produce both a nonparticulate p21.5 species (free p21.5) and capsid particles. We describe rapid and simple methods for fractionating these species on a small scale either with step gradients of 10 to 60% (wt/vol) sucrose or by centrifugation to pellet the particles, and we characterize the oocyte core particles. Free p21.5 exhibits chemical and physical properties distinctly different from those of particles. Free p21.5 is partially cleaved by proteinase K, whereas core particles are almost completely resistant to cleavage. This suggests that the carboxyl-terminal protamine region, the main target for proteases within p21.5, is exposed in free p21.5 but faces the interior of the p21.5 core particle. Finally, pulse-chase experiments demonstrated that free p21.5 can be chased almost quantitatively into core particles, establishing that free p21.5 is fully competent to form particles and represents an assembly intermediate on the pathway for core particle formation. However, core particle assembly appears very dependent on p21.5 concentration and is rapidly compromised if the p21.5 concentration is lowered. The advantages of oocytes for studying assembly are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The location of hepatitis B virus (HBV) nucleocapsid (core particle) assembly in infected cells remains controversial. Some lines of evidence implicate the nucleus; others favor the cytoplasm. Via injection of a synthetic mRNA encoding the HBV nucleocapsid protein (p21.5), we have expressed both unassembled p21.5 and nucleocapsidlike core particles in Xenopus oocytes. Subcellular fractionation reveals that approximately 91% of the unassembled p21.5 and 95% of the core particles are cytoplasmic, with only 9 and 5%, respectively, in the nucleus. We present evidence showing that unassembled p21.5 equilibrates between nucleus and cytoplasm by passive diffusion and that intact core particles do not enter the nucleus. To examine the role of the nucleus in core particle formation, we expressed p21.5 in surgically anucleate oocytes. We show that anucleate oocytes support efficient core particle formation, indicating that (i) the nucleus is not essential for assembly and (ii) the cytoplasm can assemble most core particles found in oocytes. On the basis of our data, we propose that in oocytes, most core particle assembly (up to 95%) occurs in the cytoplasm, but that at least approximately 5% of the cellular core particles are assembled in the nucleus and remain there. We discuss the implications of these findings for the formation of replication-competent core particles in infected cells.  相似文献   

5.
Macromolecular complexes are responsible for many key biological processes. However, in most cases details of the assembly/disassembly of such complexes are unknown at the molecular level, as the low abundance and transient nature of assembly intermediates make analysis challenging. The assembly of virus capsids is an example of such a process. The hepatitis B virus capsid (core) can be composed of either 90 or 120 dimers of coat protein. Previous studies have proposed a trimer of dimers as an important intermediate species in assembly, acting to nucleate further assembly by dimer addition. Using novel genetically-fused coat protein dimers, we have been able to trap higher-order assembly intermediates and to demonstrate for the first time that both dimeric and trimeric complexes are on pathway to virus-like particle (capsid) formation.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The capsids of most spherical viruses are icosahedral, an arrangement of multiples of 60 subunits. Though it is a salient point in the life cycle of any virus, the physical chemistry of virus capsid assembly is poorly understood. We have developed general models of capsid assembly that describe the process in terms of a cascade of low order association reactions. The models predict sigmoidal assembly kinetics, where intermediates approach a low steady state concentration for the greater part of the reaction. Features of the overall reaction can be identified on the basis of the concentration dependence of assembly. In simulations, and on the basis of our understanding of the models, we find that nucleus size and the order of subsequent "elongation" reactions are reflected in the concentration dependence of the extent of the reaction and the rate of the fast phase, respectively. The reaction kinetics deduced for our models of virus assembly can be related to the assembly of any "spherical" polymer. Using light scattering and size exclusion chromatography, we observed polymerization of assembly domain dimers of hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid protein. Empty capsids assemble at a rate that is a function of protein concentration and ionic strength. The kinetics of capsid formation were sigmoidal, where the rate of the fast phase had second-power concentration dependence. The extent of assembly had third-power concentration dependence. Simulations based on the models recapitulated the concentration dependences observed for HBV capsid assembly. These results strongly suggest that in vitro HBV assembly is nucleated by a trimer of dimers and proceeds by the addition of individual dimeric subunits. On the basis of this mechanism, we suggest that HBV capsid assembly could be an important target for antiviral therapeutics.  相似文献   

8.
For many protein multimers, association and dissociation reactions fail to reach the same end point; there is hysteresis preventing one and/or the other reaction from equilibrating. We have studied in vitro assembly of dimeric hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid protein and dissociation of the resulting T = 4 icosahedral capsids. Empty HBV capsids composed of 120 capsid protein dimers were more resistant to dissociation by dilution or denaturants than anticipated from assembly experiments. Using intrinsic fluorescence, circular dichroism, and size exclusion chromatography, we showed that denaturants dissociate the HBV capsids without unfolding the capsid protein; unfolding of dimer only occurred at higher denaturant concentrations. The apparent energy of interaction between dimers measured in dissociation experiments was much stronger than when measured in assembly studies. Unlike assembly, capsid dissociation did not have the concentration dependence expected for a 120-subunit complex; consequently the apparent association energy systematically varied with reactant concentration. These data are evidence of hysteresis for HBV capsid dissociation. Simulations of capsid assembly and dissociation reactions recapitulate and provide an explanation for the observed behavior; these results are also applicable to oligomeric and multidomain proteins. In our calculations, we find that dissociation is impeded by temporally elevated concentrations of intermediates; this has the paradoxical effect of favoring re-assembly of those intermediates despite the global trend toward dissociation. Hysteresis masks all but the most dramatic decreases in contact energy. In contrast, assembly reactions rapidly approach equilibrium. These results provide the first rigorous explanation of how virus capsids can remain intact under extreme conditions but are still capable of "breathing." A biological implication of enhanced stability is that a triggering event may be required to initiate virus uncoating.  相似文献   

9.
C Chang  S Zhou  D Ganem    D N Standring 《Journal of virology》1994,68(8):5225-5231
Hepadnaviruses encode a single core (C) protein which assembles into a nucleocapsid containing the polymerase (P) protein and pregenomic RNA during viral replication in hepatocytes. We examined the ability of heterologous hepadnavirus C proteins to cross-oligomerize. Using a two-hybrid assay in HepG2 cells, we observed cross-oligomerization among the core proteins from hepatitis B virus (HBV), woodchuck hepatitis virus, and ground squirrel hepatitis virus. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, in which hepadnavirus C proteins form capsids, the C polypeptides from woodchuck hepatitis virus and ground squirrel hepatitis virus, but not duck hepatitis B virus, can efficiently coassemble with an epitope-tagged HBV core polypeptide to form mixed capsids. However, when two different core mRNAs are coexpressed in oocytes the core monomers show a strong preference for forming homodimers rather than heterodimers. This holds true even for coexpression of two HBV C proteins differing only by an epitope tag, suggesting that core monomers are not free to diffuse and associate with other monomers. Thus, mixed capsids result from aggregation of different species of homodimers.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections, one of the most common mutations to the virus occurs at amino acid 97 of the core protein, where leucine replaces either phenylalanine or isoleucine, depending on strain. This mutation correlates with changes in viral nucleic acid metabolism and/or secretion. We hypothesize that this phenotype is due in part to altered core assembly, a process required for DNA synthesis. We examined in vitro assembly of empty HBV capsids from wild-type and F97L core protein assembly domains. The mutation enhanced both the rate and extent of assembly relative to those for the wild-type protein. The difference between the two proteins was most obvious in the temperature dependence of assembly, which was dramatically stronger for the mutant protein, indicating a much more positive enthalpy. Since the structures of the mutant and wild-type capsids are essentially the same and the mutation is not involved in the contact between dimers, we suggest that the F97L mutation affects the dynamic behavior of dimer and capsid.  相似文献   

12.
The capsid of hepatitis C virus (HCV) particles is considered to be composed of the mature form (p21) of core protein. Maturation to p21 involves cleavage of the transmembrane domain of the precursor form (p23) of core protein by signal peptide peptidase (SPP), a cellular protease embedded in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. Here we have addressed whether SPP-catalyzed maturation to p21 is a prerequisite for HCV particle morphogenesis in the endoplasmic reticulum. HCV structural proteins were expressed by using recombinant Semliki Forest virus replicon in mammalian cells or recombinant baculovirus in insect cells, because these systems have been shown to allow the visualization of HCV budding events and the isolation of HCV-like particles, respectively. Inhibition of SPP-catalyzed cleavage of core protein by either an SPP inhibitor or HCV core mutations not only did not prevent but instead tended to facilitate the observation of viral buds and the recovery of virus-like particles. Remarkably, although maturation to p21 was only partially inhibited by mutations in insect cells, p23 was the only form of core protein found in HCV-like particles. Finally, newly developed assays demonstrated that p23 capsids are more stable than p21 capsids. These results show that SPP-catalyzed cleavage of core protein is dispensable for HCV budding but decreases the stability of the viral capsid. We propose a model in which p23 is the form of HCV core protein committed to virus assembly, and cleavage by SPP occurs during and/or after virus budding to predispose the capsid to subsequent disassembly in a new cell.  相似文献   

13.
Stray SJ  Ceres P  Zlotnick A 《Biochemistry》2004,43(31):9989-9998
Assembly of virus particles in infected cells is likely to be a tightly regulated process. Previously, we found that in vitro assembly of hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid protein is highly dependent on protein and NaCl concentration. Here we show that micromolar concentrations of Zn2+ are sufficient to initiate assembly of capsid protein, whereas other mono- and divalent cations elicited assembly only at millimolar concentrations, similar to those required for NaCl-induced assembly. Altered intrinsic protein fluorescence and highly cooperative binding of at least four Zn2+ ions (KD approximately 7 microM) indicated that binding induced a conformational change in capsid protein. At 37 degrees C, Zn2+ enhanced the initial rate of assembly and produced normal capsids, but it did not alter the extent of assembly at equilibrium. Assembly mediated by high zinc concentrations (> or =300 microM) yielded few capsids but produced a population of oligomers recognized by capsid-specific antibodies, suggesting a kinetically trapped assembly reaction. Comparison of kinetic simulations to in vitro assembly reactions leads us to suggest that kinetic trapping was due to the enhancement of the nucleation rate relative to the elongation rate. Zinc-induced HBV assembly has hallmarks of an allosterically regulated process: ligand binding at one site influences binding at other sites (cooperativity) indicating that binding is associated with conformational change, and binding of ligand alters the biological activity of assembly. We conclude that zinc binding enhances the kinetics of assembly by promoting formation of an intermediate that is readily consumed in the reaction. Free zinc ions may not be the true in vivo activator of assembly, but they provide a model for regulation of assembly.  相似文献   

14.
The coat protein (CP) of cowpea chlorotic mottle virus assembles exclusively into a T=3 capsid in vivo and, under proper conditions, in vitro. The N-terminal domain of CP has been implicated in proper assembly and was viewed as a required switch for mediating hexamer and pentamer formation in T=3 assembly. We observed that a mutant CP lacking most of the N-terminal domain, NDelta34, assembles, in vitro, into statistically predictable numbers of: native-like T=3 capsids of 90 dimers; "T=2" capsids of 60 dimers; T=1 capsids of 30 dimers. We generated cryo-EM image reconstructions of each form and built pseudo-atomic models based on the subunits from the crystal structure of plant-derived T=3 virus allowing a detailed comparison of stabilizing interactions in the three assemblies. The statistical nature of the distribution of assembly products and the observed structures indicates that the N-terminus of CP is not a switch that is required to form the proper ratio of hexamers and pentamers for T=3 assembly; rather, it biases the direction of assembly to T=3 particles from the possibilities available to NDelta34 through flexible dimer hinges and variations in subunit contacts. Our results are consistent with a pentamer of dimers (PODs) nucleating assembly in all cases but subunit dimers can be added with different trajectories that favor specific T=3 or T=1 global particle geometries. Formation of the "T=2" particles appears to be fundamentally different in that they not only nucleate with PODs, but assembly propagates by the addition of mostly, if not exclusively PODs generating an entirely new subunit interface in the process. These results show that capsid geometry is flexible and may readily adapt to new requirements as the virus evolves.  相似文献   

15.
Here we report the effect of a heteroaryldihydropyrimidine (HAP) antiviral compound, BAY 41-4109, on Hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid assembly and on preformed HBV capsids. The HBV capsid is an icosahedral complex of 120 capsid protein dimers. BAY41-4109 inhibits virus production in vivo by a mechanism that targets the viral capsid. We found that BAY 41-4109 was able to both accelerate and misdirect capsid assembly in vitro. As little as one HAP molecule for every five HBV dimers was sufficient to induce formation of non-capsid polymers. Unlike the related molecule HAP-1 (Stray et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 102:8138-43, 2005), no stable assembly intermediates were observed in assembly reactions with BAY 41-4109, indicating that accelerated assembly by BAY 41-4109 was still kinetically regulated by the nucleation rate. Preformed capsids were stabilized by BAY 41-4109, up to a ratio of one inhibitor molecule per two dimers. However, at BAY 41-4109:dimer ratios of 1:1 and greater, capsids were destabilized to yield very large non-capsid polymers. These data suggest the existence of two functionally distinguishable classes of drug-binding sites on HBV capsids. Occupation of the first class of site stabilizes capsid, while binding at the second class requires or induces structural changes that cannot be tolerated without destabilizing the capsid. Our data suggest that HAP compounds may inhibit virus replication by inducing assembly inappropriately and, when in excess, by misdirecting assembly decreasing the stability of normal capsids.  相似文献   

16.
The assembly of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is poorly understood, largely due to the lack of mammalian cell culture systems that are easily manipulated and produce high titers of virus. This problem is highlighted by the inability of the recently established HCV replicon systems to support HCV capsid assembly despite high levels of structural protein synthesis. Here we demonstrate that up to 80% of HCV core protein synthesized de novo in cell-free systems containing rabbit reticulocyte lysate or wheat germ extracts assembles into HCV capsids. This contrasts with standard primate cell culture systems, in which almost no core assembles into capsids. Cell-free HCV capsids, which have a sedimentation value of approximately 100S, have a buoyant density (1.28 g/ml) on cesium chloride similar to that of HCV capsids from other systems. Capsids produced in cell-free systems are also indistinguishable from capsids isolated from HCV-infected patient serum when analyzed by transmission electron microscopy. Using these cell-free systems, we show that HCV capsid assembly is independent of signal sequence cleavage, is dependent on the N terminus but not the C terminus of HCV core, proceeds at very low nascent chain concentrations, is independent of intact membrane surfaces, and is partially inhibited by cultured liver cell lysates. By allowing reproducible and quantitative assessment of viral and cellular requirements for capsid formation, these cell-free systems make a mechanistic dissection of HCV capsid assembly possible.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Assembly and disassembly of viral capsids are essential steps in the viral life cycle. Studies on their kinetics are mostly performed in vitro, allowing application of biochemical, biophysical and visualizing techniques. In vivo kinetics are poorly understood and the transferability of the in vitro models to the cellular environment remains speculative. We analyzed capsid disassembly of the hepatitis B virus in digitonin-permeabilized cells which support nuclear capsid entry and subsequent genome release. Using gradient centrifugation, size exclusion chromatography and immune fluorescence microscopy of digitonin-permeabilized cells, we showed that capsids open and close reversibly. In the absence of RNA, capsid re-assembly slows down; the capsids remain disintegrated and enter the nucleus as protein dimers or irregular polymers. Upon the presence of cellular RNA, capsids re-assemble in the nucleus. We conclude that reversible genome release from hepatitis B virus capsids is a unique strategy different from that of other viruses, which employs irreversible capsid destruction for genome release. The results allowed us to propose a model of HBV genome release in which the unique environment of the nuclear pore favors HBV capsid disassembly reaction, while both cytoplasm and nucleus favor capsid assembly.  相似文献   

19.
Many capsid proteins have peptides that influence their assembly. In hepatitis B virus capsid protein, the peptide STLPETTVV, linking the shell-forming 'core' domain and the nucleic acid-binding 'protamine' domain, has such a role. We have studied its morphogenic properties by permuting its sequence, substituting it with an extraneous peptide, deleting it to directly fuse the core and protamine domains and assembling core domain dimers with added linker peptides. The peptide was found to be necessary for the assembly of protamine domain-containing capsids, although its size-determining effect tolerates some modifications. Although largely invisible in a capsid crystal structure, we could visualize linker peptides by cryo-EM difference imaging: they emerge on the inner surface and extend from the capsid protein dimer interface towards the adjacent symmetry axis. A closely sequence-similar peptide in cellobiose dehydrogenase, which has an extended conformation, offers a plausible prototype. We propose that linker peptides are attached to the capsid inner surface as hinged struts, forming a mobile array, an arrangement with implications for morphogenesis and the management of encapsidated nucleic acid.  相似文献   

20.
Ceres P  Zlotnick A 《Biochemistry》2002,41(39):11525-11531
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is an enveloped DNA virus with a spherical capsid (or core). The capsid is constructed from 120 copies of the homodimeric capsid protein arranged with T = 4 icosahedral symmetry. We examined in vitro assembly of purified E. coli expressed HBV capsid protein. After equilibration, concentrations of capsid and dimer were evaluated by size exclusion chromatography. The extent of assembly increased as temperature and ionic strength increased. The concentration dependence of capsid assembly conformed to the equilibrium expression: K(capsid) = [capsid]/[dimer](120). Given the known geometry for HBV capsids and dimers, the per capsid assembly energy was partitioned into energy per subunit-subunit contact. We were able to make three major conclusions. (i) Weak interactions (from -2.9 kcal/mol at 21 degrees C in low salt to -4.4 kcal/mol at 37 degrees C in high salt) at each intersubunit contact result in a globally stable capsid; weak intersubunit interactions may be the basis for the phenomenon of capsid breathing. (ii) HBV assembly is characterized by positive enthalpy and entropy. The reaction is entropy-driven, consistent with the largely hydrophobic contacts found in the crystal structure. (iii) Increasing NaCl concentration increases the magnitude of free energy, enthalpy, and entropy, as if ionic strength were increasing the amount of hydrophobic surface buried by assembly. This last point leads us to suggest that salt acts by inducing a conformational change in the dimer from an assembly-inactive form to an assembly-active form. This model of conformational change linked to assembly is consistent with immunological differences between dimer and capsid.  相似文献   

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