AI Article Synopsis

  • Interferon response suppression in respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is facilitated by nonstructural proteins NS1 and NS2, which form high-order complexes with cellular partners.
  • Proline residues P81 and P67 are crucial for the conformational changes that enable NS1 oligomerization, with P81 involved in stabilizing the structure and P67 influencing aggregation tendencies.
  • Despite their spatial distance from the C-terminal helix, both proline mutations affect the stability of oligomerization and aggregation processes, highlighting a significant connection between structural dynamics and the functionality of NS1 in multiprotein complexes.

Article Abstract

Interferon response suppression by the respiratory syncytial virus relies on two unique nonstructural proteins, NS1 and NS2, that interact with cellular partners through high-order complexes. We hypothesized that two conserved proline residues, P81 and P67, participate in the conformational change leading to oligomerization. We found that the molecular dynamics of NS1 show a highly mobile C-terminal helix, which becomes rigid upon in silico replacement of P81. A soluble oligomerization pathway into regular spherical structures at low ionic strengths competes with an aggregation pathway at high ionic strengths with an increase in temperature. P81A requires higher temperatures to oligomerize and has a small positive effect on aggregation, while P67A is largely prone to aggregation. Chemical denaturation shows a first transition, involving a high fluorescence and ellipticity change corresponding to both a conformational change and substantial effects on the environment of its single tryptophan, that is strongly destabilized by P67A but stabilized by P81A. The subsequent global cooperative unfolding corresponding to the main β-sheet core is not affected by the proline mutations. Thus, a clear link exists between the effect of P81 and P67 on the stability of the first transition and oligomerization/aggregation. Interestingly, both P67 and P81 are located far away in space and sequence from the C-terminal helix, indicating a marked global structural dynamics. This provides a mechanism for modulating the oligomerization of NS1 by unfolding of a weak helix that exposes hydrophobic surfaces, linked to the participation of NS1 in multiprotein complexes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.8b01288DOI Listing

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