1. Slowly folding surface extension in the prototypic avian hepatitis B virus capsid governs stability.
- Author
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Makbul, Cihan, Nassal, Michael, and Böttcher, Bettina
- Subjects
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HEPATITIS B virus , *AMINO acids , *CAPSIDS , *PROLINE , *NUCLEOCAPSIDS - Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is an important but difficult to study human pathogen. Most basics of the hepadnaviral life-cycle were unraveled using duck HBV (DHBV) as a model although DHBV has a capsid protein (CP) comprising ~260 rather than ~180 amino acids. Here we present high-resolution structures of several DHBV capsid-like particles (CLPs) determined by electron cryo-microscopy. As for HBV, DHBV CLPs consist of a dimeric α-helical frame-work with protruding spikes at the dimer interface. A fundamental new feature is a ~ 45 amino acid proline-rich extension in each monomer replacing the tip of the spikes in HBV CP. In vitro, folding of the extension takes months, implying a catalyzed process in vivo. DHBc variants lacking a folding-proficient extension produced regular CLPs in bacteria but failed to form stable nucleocapsids in hepatoma cells. We propose that the extension domain acts as a conformational switch with differential response options during viral infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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