AI Article Synopsis

  • HIV-1 Gag proteins have moderate interprotein interactions and require conformational changes during particle assembly, while MLV Gag proteins exhibit much weaker interactions and remain predominantly monomeric in solution.
  • Small-angle X-ray scattering studies reveal that MLV Gag is extended in shape, maintaining consistent dimensions in its immature particles, unlike HIV-1 Gag.
  • The extended conformation of MLV Gag is influenced by specific proline sequences and charged regions in its structure, highlighting significant differences in the characteristics and assembly processes of these two retroviruses.

Article Abstract

Immature retrovirus particles are assembled from the multidomain Gag protein. In these particles, the Gag proteins are arranged radially as elongated rods. We have previously characterized the properties of HIV-1 Gag in solution. In the absence of nucleic acid, HIV-1 Gag displays moderately weak interprotein interactions, existing in monomer-dimer equilibrium. Neutron scattering and hydrodynamic studies suggest that the protein is compact, and biochemical studies indicate that the two ends can approach close in three-dimensional space, implying the need for a significant conformational change during assembly. We now describe the properties of the Gag protein of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV), a gammaretrovirus. We found that this protein is very different from HIV-1 Gag: it has much weaker protein-protein interaction and is predominantly monomeric in solution. This has allowed us to study the protein by small-angle X-ray scattering and to build a low-resolution molecular envelope for the protein. We found that MLV Gag is extended in solution, with an axial ratio of ∼7, comparable to its dimensions in immature particles. Mutational analysis suggests that runs of prolines in its matrix and p12 domains and the highly charged stretch at the C terminus of its capsid domain all contribute to this extended conformation. These differences between MLV Gag and HIV-1 Gag and their implications for retroviral assembly are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3209342PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.05889-11DOI Listing

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