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The infectious particle of insect-borne totivirus-like Omono River virus has raised ridges and lacks fibre complexes

Authors :
Naoyuki Miyazaki
Mutsuo Kobayashi
Daniel S. D. Larsson
Kyoko Sawabe
Haruhiko Isawa
Kazuyoshi Murata
Laura H. Gunn
Kenta Okamoto
Kerstin Mühlig
Janos Hajdu
Filipe R. N. C. Maia
Daisuke Kobayashi
Martin Svenda
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Omono River virus (OmRV) is a double-stranded RNA virus isolated from Culex mosquitos, and it belongs to a group of unassigned insect viruses that appear to be related to Totiviridae. This paper describes electron cryo-microscopy (cryoEM) structures for the intact OmRV virion to 8.9 Å resolution and the structure of the empty virus-like-particle, that lacks RNA, to 8.3 Å resolution. The icosahedral capsid contains 120-subunits and resembles another closely related arthropod-borne totivirus-like virus, the infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) from shrimps. Both viruses have an elevated plateau around their icosahedral 5-fold axes, surrounded by a deep canyon. Sequence and structural analysis suggests that this plateau region is mainly composed of the extended C-terminal region of the capsid proteins. In contrast to IMNV, the infectious form of OmRV lacks extensive fibre complexes at its 5-fold axes as directly confirmed by a contrast-enhancement technique, using Zernike phase-contrast cryo-EM. Instead, these fibre complexes are replaced by a short “plug” structure at the five-fold axes of OmRV. OmRV and IMNV have acquired an extracellular phase, and the structures at the five-fold axes may be significant in adaptation to cell-to-cell transmission in metazoan hosts.

Details

ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c15dadfb4d1747c3c0cf80305ccd216