4.8 Article

Engineering Metastability into a Virus-like Particle to Enable Triggered Dissociation

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 145, Issue 4, Pages 2322-2331

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c109372322

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To create a virus-like particle (VLP) that can release its cargo upon triggering, a chemical biology approach is employed to destabilize a self-assembling capsid. By redesigning the dimeric hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid protein (Cp) with differentially addressable cysteines, the resulting construct forms VLPs that can undergo triggered dissociation. The VLPs are stable until exposed to reducing agent, causing slow dissociation and release of cargo.
For a virus-like particle (VLP) to serve as a delivery platform, the VLP must be able to release its cargo in response to a trigger. Here, we use a chemical biology approach to destabilize a self-assembling capsid for a subsequent triggered disassembly. We redesigned the dimeric hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid protein (Cp) with two differentially addressable cysteines, C150 for reversibly crosslinking the capsid and C124 to react with a destabilizing moiety. The resulting construct, Cp150-V124C, assembles into icosahedral, 120-dimer VLPs that spontaneously crosslink via the C -terminal C150, leaving C124 buried at a dimer-dimer interface. The VLP is driven into a metastable state when C124 is reacted with the bulky fluorophore, maleimidyl BoDIPY-FL. The resulting VLP is stable until exposed to modest, physiologically relevant concentrations of reducing agent. We observe dissociation with FRET relaxation of polarization, size exclusion chromatography, and resistive-pulse sensing. Dissociation is slow, minutes to hours, with a characteristic lag phase. Mathematical modeling based on the presence of a nucleation step predicts disassembly dynamics that are consistent with experimental observations. VLPs transfected into hepatoma cells show similar dissociation behavior. These results suggest a generalizable strategy for designing a VLP that can release its contents in an environmentally responsive reaction.

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