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1.
The protonation of histidine in acidic environments underpins its role in regulating the function of pH-sensitive proteins. For pH-sensitive viral fusion proteins, histidine protonation in the endosome leads to the activation of their membrane fusion function. The HCV (hepatitis C virus) glycoprotein E1-E2 heterodimer mediates membrane fusion within the endosome, but the roles of conserved histidine residues in the formation of a functional heterodimer and in sensing pH changes is unknown. We examined the functional roles of conserved histidine residues located within E1 and E2. The E1 mutations, H222A/R, H298R and H352A, disrupted E1-E2 heterodimerization and reduced virus entry. A total of five out of six histidine residues located within the E2 RBD (receptor-binding domain) were important for the E2 fold, and their substitution with arginine or alanine caused aberrant heterodimerization and/or CD81 binding. Distinct roles in E1-E2 heterodimerization and in virus entry were identified for His691 and His693 respectively within the membrane-proximal stem region. Viral entry and cell-cell fusion at neutral and low pH values were enhanced with H445R, indicating that the protonation state of His445 is a key regulator of HCV fusion. However, H445R did not overcome the block to virus entry induced by bafilomycin A1, indicating a requirement for an endosomal activation trigger in addition to acidic pH.  相似文献   

2.
A central event in the invasion of a host cell by an enveloped virus is the fusion of viral and cell membranes. For many viruses, membrane fusion is driven by specific viral surface proteins that undergo large-scale conformational rearrangements, triggered by exposure to low pH in the endosome upon internalization. Here, we present evidence suggesting that in both class I (helical hairpin proteins) and class II (beta-structure-rich proteins) pH-dependent fusion proteins the protonation of specific histidine residues triggers fusion via an analogous molecular mechanism. These histidines are located in the vicinity of positively charged residues in the prefusion conformation, and they subsequently form salt bridges with negatively charged residues in the postfusion conformation. The molecular surfaces involved in the corresponding structural rearrangements leading to fusion are highly conserved and thus might provide a suitable common target for the design of antivirals, which could be active against a diverse range of pathogenic viruses.  相似文献   

3.
During the fusion of the influenza virus to the host cell, bending of the HA2 chain of hemagglutinin into a hairpin-shaped structure in a pH-dependent manner facilitates the fusion of the viral envelope and the endosomal membrane. To characterize the structural and dynamical responses of the hinge region of HA2 to pH changes and examine the role of a conserved histidine in this region (the hinge histidine), we have performed an extensive set of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of 26-residue peptides encompassing the hinge regions of several hemagglutinin subtypes under both neutral and low pH conditions, modeled by the change of the protonation state of the hinge histidine. More than 70 sets of MD simulations (collectively amounting to 25.1 μs) were performed in both implicit and explicit solvents to study the effect of histidine protonation on structural dynamics of the hinge region. In both explicit and implicit solvent simulations, hinge bending was consistently observed upon the protonation of the histidine in all the simulations starting with an initial straight helical conformation, whereas the systems with a neutral histidine retained their primarily straight conformation throughout the simulations. Conversely, the MD simulations starting from an initially bent conformation resulted in the formation of a straight helical structure upon the neutralization of the hinge histidine, whereas the bent structure was maintained when the hinge histidine remained protonated. Finally, mutation of the hinge histidine to alanine abolishes the bending response of the peptide altogether. A molecular mechanism based on the interaction of the hinge histidine with neighboring acidic residues is proposed to be responsible for its role in controlling the conformation of the hinge. We propose that this might present a common mechanism for pH-controlled structural changes in helical structures when histidines act as the pH sensor.  相似文献   

4.
During the fusion of the influenza virus to the host cell, bending of the HA2 chain of hemagglutinin into a hairpin-shaped structure in a pH-dependent manner facilitates the fusion of the viral envelope and the endosomal membrane. To characterize the structural and dynamical responses of the hinge region of HA2 to pH changes and examine the role of a conserved histidine in this region (the hinge histidine), we have performed an extensive set of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of 26-residue peptides encompassing the hinge regions of several hemagglutinin subtypes under both neutral and low pH conditions, modeled by the change of the protonation state of the hinge histidine. More than 70 sets of MD simulations (collectively amounting to 25.1 μs) were performed in both implicit and explicit solvents to study the effect of histidine protonation on structural dynamics of the hinge region. In both explicit and implicit solvent simulations, hinge bending was consistently observed upon the protonation of the histidine in all the simulations starting with an initial straight helical conformation, whereas the systems with a neutral histidine retained their primarily straight conformation throughout the simulations. Conversely, the MD simulations starting from an initially bent conformation resulted in the formation of a straight helical structure upon the neutralization of the hinge histidine, whereas the bent structure was maintained when the hinge histidine remained protonated. Finally, mutation of the hinge histidine to alanine abolishes the bending response of the peptide altogether. A molecular mechanism based on the interaction of the hinge histidine with neighboring acidic residues is proposed to be responsible for its role in controlling the conformation of the hinge. We propose that this might present a common mechanism for pH-controlled structural changes in helical structures when histidines act as the pH sensor.  相似文献   

5.
The envelope protein E of the flavivirus tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus promotes cell entry by inducing fusion of the viral membrane with an intracellular membrane after uptake by endocytosis. This protein differs from other well-studied viral and cellular fusion proteins because of its distinct molecular architecture and apparent lack of involvement of coiled coils in the low-pH-induced structural transitions that lead to fusion. A highly conserved loop (the cd loop), which resides at the distal tip of each subunit and is mostly buried in the subunit interface of the native E homodimer at neutral pH, has been hypothesized to function as an internal fusion peptide at low pH, but this has not yet been shown experimentally. It was predicted by examination of the X-ray crystal structure of the TBE virus E protein (F. A. Rey et al., Nature 375:291-298, 1995) that mutations at a specific residue within this loop (Leu 107) would not cause the native structure to be disrupted. We therefore introduced amino acid substitutions at this position and, using recombinant subviral particles, investigated the effects of these changes on fusion and related properties. Replacement of Leu with hydrophilic amino acids strongly impaired (Thr) or abolished (Asp) fusion activity, whereas a Phe mutant still retained a significant degree of fusion activity. Liposome coflotation experiments showed that the fusion-negative Asp mutant did not form a stable interaction with membranes at low pH, although it was still capable of undergoing the structural rearrangements required for fusion. These data support the hypothesis that the cd loop may be directly involved in interactions with target membranes during fusion.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Flaviviruses bud into the endoplasmic reticulum and are transported through the secretory pathway, where the mildly acidic environment triggers particle rearrangement and allows furin processing of the prM protein to pr and M. The peripheral pr peptide remains bound to virus at low pH and inhibits virus-membrane interaction. Upon exocytosis, the release of pr at neutral pH completes virus maturation to an infectious particle. Together this evidence suggests that pr may shield the flavivirus fusion protein E from the low pH environment of the exocytic pathway. Here we developed an in vitro system to reconstitute the interaction of dengue virus (DENV) pr with soluble truncated E proteins. At low pH recombinant pr bound to both monomeric and dimeric forms of E and blocked their membrane insertion. Exogenous pr interacted with mature infectious DENV and specifically inhibited virus fusion and infection. Alanine substitution of E H244, a highly conserved histidine residue in the pr-E interface, blocked pr-E interaction and reduced release of DENV virus-like particles. Folding, membrane insertion and trimerization of the H244A mutant E protein were preserved, and particle release could be partially rescued by neutralization of the low pH of the secretory pathway. Thus, pr acts to silence flavivirus fusion activity during virus secretion, and this function can be separated from the chaperone activity of prM. The sequence conservation of key residues involved in the flavivirus pr-E interaction suggests that this protein-protein interface may be a useful target for broad-spectrum inhibitors.  相似文献   

8.
Vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein G (VSV‐G) belongs to a new class of viral fusion proteins (Class III). The structure of VSV‐G has been solved in two different conformations and fusion is known to be triggered by low pH. To investigate Class III fusion mechanisms, molecular dynamics simulations were performed on the VSV‐G prefusion structure in two different protonation states: at physiological pH (pH 7) and low pH present in the endosome (pH 5). Domain IV containing the fusion loops, which need to interact with the target membrane, exhibits the highest mobility. Energetic analyses revealed weakened interaction between Domain IV and the protein core at pH 5, which can be attributed to two pairs of structurally neighboring conserved and differentially protonated residues in the Domain IV–core interface. Energetic calculations also demonstrated that the interaction between the subunits in the core of the trimeric VSV‐G is strengthened at pH 5, mainly due to newly formed interactions between the C‐terminal loop of Domain II and the N‐terminus of the adjacent subunit. A pair of interacting residues in this interface that is affected by differential protonation was shown to be the main effectors of this phenomenon. The results of this study thus enhance the mechanistic understanding of the effects of protonation changes in VSV‐G. Proteins 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
The exposure of the flavivirus tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus to an acidic pH is necessary for virus-induced membrane fusion and leads to a quantitative and irreversible conversion of the envelope protein E dimers to trimers. To study the structural requirements for this oligomeric rearrangement, the effect of low-pH treatment on the oligomeric state of different isolated forms of protein E was investigated. Full-length E dimers obtained by solubilization of virus with the detergent Triton X-100 formed trimers at low pH, whereas truncated E dimers lacking the stem-anchor region underwent a reversible dissociation into monomers without forming trimers. These data suggest that the low-pH-induced rearrangement in virions is a two-step process involving a reversible dissociation of the E dimers followed by an irreversible formation of trimers, a process which requires the stem-anchor portion of the protein. This region contains potential amphipathic alpha-helical and conserved structural elements whose interactions may contribute to the rearrangements which initiate the fusion process.  相似文献   

10.
The flavivirus membrane fusion machinery, like that of many other enveloped viruses, is triggered by the acidic pH in endosomes after virus uptake by receptor-mediated endocytosis. It has been hypothesized that conserved histidines in the class II fusion protein E of these viruses function as molecular switches and, by their protonation, control the fusion process. Using the mutational analysis of recombinant subviral particles of tick-borne encephalitis virus, we provide direct experimental evidence that the initiation of fusion is crucially dependent on the protonation of one of the conserved histidines (His323) at the interface between domains I and III of E, leading to the dissolution of domain interactions and to the exposure of the fusion peptide. Conserved histidines located outside this critical interface were found to be completely dispensable for triggering fusion.  相似文献   

11.
During cell entry of flaviviruses, low endosomal pH triggers the rearrangement of the viral surface glycoproteins to a fusion-active state that allows the release of the infectious RNA into the cytoplasm. In this work, West Nile virus was complexed with Fab fragments of the neutralizing mAb E16 and was subsequently exposed to low pH, trapping the virions in a pre-fusion intermediate state. The structure of the complex was studied by cryo-electron microscopy and provides the first structural glimpse of a flavivirus fusion intermediate near physiological conditions. A radial expansion of the outer protein layer of the virion was observed compared to the structure at pH 8. The resulting ∼60 Å-wide shell of low density between lipid bilayer and outer protein layer is likely traversed by the stem region of the E glycoprotein. By using antibody fragments, we have captured a structural intermediate of a virus that likely occurs during cell entry. The trapping of structural transition states by antibody fragments will be applicable for other processes in the flavivirus life cycle and delineating other cellular events that involve conformational rearrangements.  相似文献   

12.
For the structure and function of proteins, the pH of the solution is one of the determining parameters. Current molecular dynamics (MD) simulations account for the solution pH only in a limited way by keeping each titratable site in a chosen protonation state. We present an algorithm that generates trajectories at a Boltzmann distributed ensemble of protonation states by a combination of MD and Monte Carlo (MC) simulation. The algorithm is useful for pH-dependent structural studies and to investigate in detail the titration behavior of proteins. The method is tested on the acidic residues of the protein hen egg white lysozyme. It is shown that small structural changes may have a big effect on the pK(A) values of titratable residues.  相似文献   

13.
pH-induced conformational changes in dengue virus (DENV) are critical to its ability to infect host cells. The envelope protein heterodimers that make up the viral envelope shift from a dimer to a trimer conformation at low-pH during membrane fusion. Previous studies have suggested that the ionization of histidine residues at low-pH is central to this pH-induced conformational change. We sought out to use molecular modeling with structure-based pKa prediction to provide a quantitative basis for the role of histidines in pH-induced conformational changes and identify which histidine residues were primarily responsible for this transition. We combined existing crystallographic and cryo-electron microscopy data to construct templates of the dimer and trimer conformations for the mature and immature virus. We then generated homology models for the four DENV serotypes and carried out structure-based pKa prediction using Rosetta. Our results showed that the pKa values of a subset of conserved histidines in DENV successfully capture the thermodynamics necessary to drive pH-induced conformational changes during fusion. Here, we identified the structural determinants underlying these pKa values and compare our findings with previous experimental results.  相似文献   

14.
Flaviviruses comprise a number of important human pathogens including yellow fever, dengue, West Nile, Japanese encephalitis and tick-borne encephalitis viruses. They are small enveloped viruses that enter cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis and release their nucleocapsid into the cytoplasm by fusing their membrane with the endosomal membrane. The fusion event is triggered by the acidic pH in the endosome and is mediated by the major envelope protein E. Based on the atomic structures of the pre- and post-fusion conformations of E, a fusion model has been proposed that includes several steps leading from the metastable assembly of E at the virion surface to membrane merger and fusion pore formation trough conversion of E into a stable trimeric post-fusion conformation. Using recombinant subviral particles of tick-borne encephalitis virus as a model, we have defined individual steps of the molecular processes underlying the flavivirus fusion mechanisms. This includes the identification of a conserved histidine as being part of the pH sensor in the fusion protein that responds to the acidic pH and thus initiates the structural transitions driving fusion.  相似文献   

15.
The enveloped alphavirus Semliki Forest virus (SFV) infects cells via a low pH-triggered membrane fusion reaction mediated by the E1 protein. E1 is a class II fusion protein that contains the hydrophobic fusion peptide loop and converts to a stable homotrimer during the fusion reaction. Intriguingly, the fusion loop is closely associated with a loop connecting the i and j beta-strands. This ij loop plays a role in the cholesterol dependence of membrane fusion and is specifically susceptible to proteolysis in the protease-resistant E1 homotrimer. The SFV ij loop contains a histidine residue at position 230. Sequence comparisons revealed that an analogous histidine is completely conserved in all alphavirus and flavivirus fusion proteins. An E1 H230A mutant was constructed using the SFV infectious clone. Although cells infected with H230A RNA produced virus particles, these virions were completely noninfectious and were blocked in both cell-cell fusion and lipid mixing assays. The H230A virions efficiently bound to cell surface receptors and responded to low pH by undergoing acid-dependent conformational changes including dissociation of the E1/E2 dimer, exposure of the fusion loop, association with target liposomes, exposure of acid-conformation-specific epitopes, and formation of the stable E1 homotrimer. Studies with a soluble fragment of E1 showed that the mutant protein was defective in lipid-dependent conformational changes. Our results indicate that the E1 ij loop and the conserved H230 residue play a critical role in alphavirus-membrane fusion and suggest the presence of a previously undescribed late intermediate in the fusion reaction.  相似文献   

16.
The envelope protein E of the flavivirus tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus is, like the alphavirus E1 protein, a class II viral fusion protein that differs structurally and probably mechanistically from class I viral fusion proteins. The surface of the native TBE virion is covered by an icosahedrally symmetrical network of E homodimers, which mediate low-pH-induced fusion in endosomes. At the pH of fusion, the E homodimers are irreversibly converted to a homotrimeric form, which we have found by intrinsic fluorescence measurements to be more stable than the native dimers. Thus, the TBE virus E protein is analogous to the prototypical class I fusion protein, the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA), in that it is initially synthesized in a metastable state that is energetically poised to be converted to the fusogenic state by exposure to low pH. However, in contrast to what has been observed with influenza virus HA, this transition could not be triggered by input of heat energy alone and membrane fusion could be induced only when the virus was exposed to an acidic pH. In a previous study we showed that the dimer-to-trimer transition appears to be a two-step process involving a reversible dissociation of the dimer followed by an irreversible trimerization of the dissociated monomeric subunits. Because the dimer-monomer equilibrium in the first step apparently depends on the protonation state of E, the lack of availability of monomers for the trimerization step at neutral pH could explain why low pH is essential for fusion in spite of the metastability of the native E dimer.  相似文献   

17.
Viruses that infect cells by uptake through endosomes have generally evolved to "sense" the local pH as part of the mechanism by which they penetrate into the cytosol. Even for the very well studied fusion proteins of enveloped viruses, identification of the specific pH sensor has been a challenge, one that has now been met successfully, for flaviviruses, by Fritz et al. (Fritz, R., K. Stiasny, and F.X. Heinz. 2008. J. Cell Biol. 183:353-361) in this issue. Thorough mutational analysis of conserved histidine residues in the envelope protein of tick-borne encephalitis virus led Fritz et al. (2008) to identify a histidine at a key domain interface as the critical pH sensor; its protonation triggers the large-scale conformational rearrangement that induces fusion of viral and endosomal membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Entry of enveloped animal viruses into their host cells always depends on a step of membrane fusion triggered by conformational changes in viral envelope glycoproteins. Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection is mediated by virus spike glycoprotein G, which induces membrane fusion at the acidic environment of the endosomal compartment. VSV-induced membrane fusion occurs at a very narrow pH range, between 6.2 and 5.8, suggesting that His protonation is required for this process. To investigate the role of His in VSV fusion, we chemically modified these residues using diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC). We found that DEPC treatment inhibited membrane fusion mediated by VSV in a concentration-dependent manner and that the complete inhibition of fusion was fully reversed by incubation of modified virus with hydroxylamine. Fluorescence measurements showed that VSV modification with DEPC abolished pH-induced conformational changes in G protein, suggesting that His protonation drives G protein interaction with the target membrane at acidic pH. Mass spectrometry analysis of tryptic fragments of modified G protein allowed the identification of the putative active His residues. Using synthetic peptides, we showed that the modification of His-148 and His-149 by DEPC, as well as the substitution of these residues by Ala, completely inhibited peptide-induced fusion, suggesting the direct participation of these His in VSV fusion.  相似文献   

19.
Xu R  Wilson IA 《Journal of virology》2011,85(10):5172-5182
The hemagglutinin (HA) envelope protein of influenza virus mediates viral entry through membrane fusion in the acidic environment of the endosome. Crystal structures of HA in pre- and postfusion states have laid the foundation for proposals for a general fusion mechanism for viral envelope proteins. The large-scale conformational rearrangement of HA at low pH is triggered by a loop-to-helix transition of an interhelical loop (B loop) within the fusion domain and is often referred to as the "spring-loaded" mechanism. Although the receptor-binding HA1 subunit is believed to act as a "clamp" to keep the B loop in its metastable prefusion state at neutral pH, the "pH sensors" that are responsible for the clamp release and the ensuing structural transitions have remained elusive. Here we identify a mutation in the HA2 fusion domain from the influenza virus H2 subtype that stabilizes the HA trimer in a prefusion-like state at and below fusogenic pH. Crystal structures of this putative early intermediate state reveal reorganization of ionic interactions at the HA1-HA2 interface at acidic pH and deformation of the HA1 membrane-distal domain. Along with neutralization of glutamate residues on the B loop, these changes cause a rotation of the B loop and solvent exposure of conserved phenylalanines, which are key residues at the trimer interface of the postfusion structure. Thus, our study reveals the possible initial structural event that leads to release of the B loop from its prefusion conformation, which is aided by unexpected structural changes within the membrane-distal HA1 domain at low pH.  相似文献   

20.
The entry of the enveloped Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) into its host cell is mediated by the viral glycoproteins Gn and Gc. We investigated the RVFV entry process and, in particular, its pH-dependent activation mechanism using our recently developed nonspreading-RVFV-particle system. Entry of the virus into the host cell was efficiently inhibited by lysosomotropic agents that prevent endosomal acidification and by compounds that interfere with dynamin- and clathrin-dependent endocytosis. Exposure of plasma membrane-bound virions to an acidic pH (<pH 6) equivalent to the pH of late endolysosomal compartments allowed the virus to bypass the endosomal route of infection. Acid exposure of virions in the absence of target membranes triggered the class II-like Gc fusion protein to form extremely stable oligomers that were resistant to SDS and temperature dissociation and concomitantly compromised virus infectivity. By targeted mutagenesis of conserved histidines in Gn and Gc, we demonstrated that mutation of a single histidine (H857) in Gc completely abrogated virus entry, as well as acid-induced Gc oligomerization. In conclusion, our data suggest that after endocytic uptake, RVFV traffics to the acidic late endolysosomal compartments, where histidine protonation drives the reorganization of the Gc fusion protein that leads to membrane fusion.  相似文献   

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