4.6 Article

Cryo EM Analysis Reveals Inherent Flexibility of Authentic Murine Papillomavirus Capsids

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13102023

Keywords

mouse papillomavirus; cryo EM; HPV16

Categories

Funding

  1. J. Gittlen Memorial Golf Tournament
  2. Pennsylvania Department of Health CURE funds
  3. Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health [NIH 1 S10 OD026822-01, 1 R01 Al134910-01A1]

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HPV is a significant health burden and a leading cause of virus-induced cancers, but studies have been hindered by restricted tropism. Alternative methods such as VLPs have been developed to overcome this issue, but structural studies have been limited by heterogeneity, fragility, and stability. By studying MmuPV1, a framework for continuing biochemical, genetic, and biophysical research for papillomaviruses has been provided.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a significant health burden and leading cause of virus-induced cancers. However, studies have been hampered due to restricted tropism that makes production and purification of high titer virus problematic. This issue has been overcome by developing alternative HPV production methods such as virus-like particles (VLPs), which are devoid of a native viral genome. Structural studies have been limited in resolution due to the heterogeneity, fragility, and stability of the VLP capsids. The mouse papillomavirus (MmuPV1) presented here has provided the opportunity to study a native papillomavirus in the context of a common laboratory animal. Using cryo EM to solve the structure of MmuPV1, we achieved 3.3 angstrom resolution with a local symmetry refinement method that defined smaller, symmetry related subparticles. The resulting high-resolution structure allowed us to build the MmuPV1 asymmetric unit for the first time and identify putative L2 density. We also used our program ISECC to quantify capsid flexibility, which revealed that capsomers move as rigid bodies connected by flexible linkers. The MmuPV1 flexibility was comparable to that of a HPV VLP previously characterized. The resulting MmuPV1 structure is a promising step forward in the study of papillomavirus and will provide a framework for continuing biochemical, genetic, and biophysical research for papillomaviruses.

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