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VISP: Center for Viral Infection Structural Proteomics > VISPCollaboratorPublications > Alphavirus capsid protein Helix I controls a checkpoint in nucleocapsid core assembly  

VISPCollaboratorPublications: Alphavirus capsid protein Helix I controls a checkpoint in nucleocapsid core assembly

Title

Alphavirus capsid protein Helix I controls a checkpoint in nucleocapsid core assembly 

Authors

Hong EM 

Abstract

The assembly of the alphavirus nucleocapsid core has been investigated using an in vitro assembly system. The C-terminal two-thirds of capsid protein (CP), residues 81 to 264 in Sindbis virus (SINV), have been previously shown to have all the RNA-CP and CP-CP contacts required for core assembly in vitro. Helix I, which is located in the N-terminal dispensable region of the CP, has been proposed to stabilize the core by forming a coiled coil in the CP dimer formed by the interaction of residues 81 to 264. We examined the ability of heterologous alphavirus CPs to dimerize and form phenotypically mixed core-like particles (CLPs) using an in vitro assembly system. The CPs of SINV and Ross River virus (RRV) do not form phenotypically mixed CLPs, but SINV and Western equine encephalitis virus CPs do form mixed cores. In addition, CP dimers do not form between SINV and RRV in these assembly reactions. In contrast, an N-terminal truncated SINV CP (residues 81 to 264) forms phenotypically mixed CLPs when it is assembled with full-length heterologous CPs, suggesting that the region that controls the mixing is present in the N-terminal 80 residues. Furthermore, this result suggests that the dimeric interaction, which was absent between SINV and RRV CPs, can be restored by the removal of the N-terminal 80 residues of the SINV CP. We mapped the determinant that is responsible for phenotypic mixing onto helix I by using domain swapping experiments. Thus, discrimination of the CP partner in alphavirus core assembly appears to be dependent on helix I sequence compatibility. These results suggest that helix I provides one of the important interactions during nucleocapsid core formation and may play a regulatory role during the early steps of the assembly process.

Journal

J. Virol. 

Date

9/1/2006 

Link

PMID: 16940497 

Reference

Hong EM, Perera R, Kuhn RJ.  Alphavirus capsid protein Helix I controls a checkpoint in nucleocapsid core assembly.  J. Virol. 80:8848-8855 (2006)

PMID

16940497  

Keyword

VISP, FLAVI 
Attachments
Created at 3/1/2007 5:32 PM  by Sophie Coon 
Last modified at 3/1/2007 5:32 PM  by Sophie Coon