4.8 Article

An Intrinsically Disordered Peptide from Ebola Virus VP35 Controls Viral RNA Synthesis by Modulating Nucleoprotein-RNA Interactions

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 376-389

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2015.03.034

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Funding

  1. US DOE [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  2. NIH [P41GM103399, R01AI107056, R01GM053163, R01AI077519, R01AI059536, U19AI109945, U19AI109664, U19 AI070489, P41GM103832, P50 GM1003297, R01AI081914]
  3. NIAID/NIH/DHS [HHSN272201200026C]
  4. DOD [DTRA 1-21-1-0002, DTRA-HDTRA1-12-1-0051, DTRA HDTRA1-14-1-0013]

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During viral RNA synthesis, Ebola virus (EBOV) nucleoprotein (NP) alternates between an RNA-template-bound form and a template-free form to provide the viral polymerase access to the RNA template. In addition, newly synthesized NP must be prevented from indiscriminately binding to noncognate RNAs. Here, we investigate the molecular bases for these critical processes. We identify an intrinsically disordered peptide derived from EBOV VP35 (NPBP, residues 20-48) that binds NP with high affinity and specificity, inhibits NP oligomerization, and releases RNA from NP-RNA complexes in vitro. The structure of the NPBP/Delta NPNTD complex, solved to 3.7 angstrom resolution, reveals how NPBP peptide occludes a large surface area that is important for NP-NP and NP-RNA interactions and for viral RNA synthesis. Together, our results identify a highly conserved viral interface that is important for EBOV replication and can be targeted for therapeutic development.

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