AI Article Synopsis

  • The MPER of HIV-1 gp41 is a promising target for vaccines aimed at generating broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs), but the structural organization of MPER in its native form is not well understood.
  • The study utilized a modified version of MPER combined with the adjacent transmembrane domain (MPER-TMD) to investigate its structural arrangement, revealing that its insertion into membranes is influenced by both TMD sequence and surrounding residues.
  • Findings showed that the MPER-TMD predominantly forms monomers and dimers rather than stable trimers, contradicting previous assumptions and suggesting a dynamic behavior that allows adaptation during the viral fusion process.

Article Abstract

The membrane proximal external region (MPER) of HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (gp) 41 is an attractive vaccine target for elicitation of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) by vaccination. However, current details regarding the quaternary structural organization of the MPER within the native prefusion trimer [(gp120/41)] are elusive and even contradictory, hindering rational MPER immunogen design. To better understand the structural topology of the MPER on the lipid bilayer, the adjacent transmembrane domain (TMD) was appended (MPER-TMD) and studied. Membrane insertion of the MPER-TMD was sensitive both to the TMD sequence and cytoplasmic residues. Antigen binding of MPER-specific bNAbs, in particular 10E8 and DH511.2_K3, was significantly impacted by the presence of the TMD. Furthermore, MPER-TMD assembly into 10-nm diameter nanodiscs revealed a heterogeneous membrane array comprised largely of monomers and dimers, as enumerated by bNAb Fab binding using single-particle electron microscopy analysis, arguing against preferential trimeric association of native MPER and TMD protein segments. Moreover, introduction of isoleucine mutations in the C-terminal heptad repeat to induce an extended MPER α-helical bundle structure yielded an antigenicity profile of cell surface-arrayed Env variants inconsistent with that found in the native prefusion state. In line with these observations, electron paramagnetic resonance analysis suggested that 10E8 inhibits viral membrane fusion by lifting the MPER N-terminal region out of the viral membrane, mandating the exposure of residues that would be occluded by MPER trimerization. Collectively, our data suggest that the MPER is not a stable trimer, but rather a dynamic segment adapted for structural changes accompanying fusion.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6842640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1912427116DOI Listing

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