AI Article Synopsis

  • The genome of retroviruses is encased in a protein shell called a capsid, primarily made up of interlocking protein hexamers that facilitate infection.
  • Research using electron and X-ray crystallography has been conducted on Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) capsid proteins, revealing that hexamers can arrange in various planar layers, impacting their structural properties.
  • The flexibility of these layers is due to movements at the connections between hexamers, allowing the capsid to maintain its curved shape, a common feature among retroviruses, despite differences in the protein sequence of RSV and other retroviruses like HIV-1.

Article Abstract

The genome of a retrovirus is surrounded by a convex protein shell, or capsid, that helps facilitate infection. The major part of the capsid surface is formed by interlocking capsid protein (CA) hexamers. We report electron and X-ray crystallographic analysis of a variety of specimens assembled in vitro from Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) CA. These specimens all contain CA hexamers arranged in planar layers, modeling the authentic capsid surface. The specimens differ only in the number of layers incorporated and in the disposition of each layer with respect to its neighbor. The body of each hexamer, formed by the N-terminal domain of CA, is connected to neighboring hexamers through C-terminal domain dimerization. The resulting layer structure is very malleable due to inter-domain flexibility. A helix-capping hydrogen bond between the two domains of RSV CA creates a pivot point, which is central to controlling their relative movement. A similar mechanism for the governance of inter-domain motion was recently described for the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) capsid, although there is negligible sequence identity between RSV and HIV-1 CA in the region of contact, and the amino acids involved in creating the pivot are not conserved. Our observations allow development of a physically realistic model for the way neighboring hexamers can tilt out of plane, deforming the hexamer layer and generating the continuously curved surfaces that are a feature of all retroviral capsids.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2012.01.014DOI Listing

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