4.6 Article

Chaperones activate hepadnavirus reverse transcriptase by transiently exposing a C-proximal region in the terminal protein domain that contributes to ε RNA binding

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 24, Pages 13354-13364

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01196-07

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All hepatitis B viruses replicate by protein-primed reverse transcription, employing a specialized reverse transcriptase, P protein, that carries a unique terminal protein (TP) domain. To initiate reverse transcription, P protein must bind to a stem-loop, E, on the pregenomic RNA template. TP then provides a Y residue for covalent attachment of the first nucleotide of an epsilon-templated DNA oligonucleotide (priming reaction) that serves to initiate full-length minus-strand DNA synthesis. a binding requires the chaperone-dependent conversion of inactive P protein into an activated, metastable form designated P*. However, how P* differs structurally from P protein is not known. Here we used an in vitro reconstitution system for active duck hepatitis B virus P combined with limited proteolysis, site-specific antibodies, and defined P mutants to structurally compare nonactivated versus chaperone-activated versus primed P protein. The data show that Hsp70 action, under conditions identical to those required for functional activation, transiently exposes the C proximal TP region which is, probably directly, involved in E RNA binding. Notably, after priming and epsilon RNA removal, a very similar new conformation appears stable without further chaperone activity; hence, the activation of P protein is triggered by energy-consuming chaperone action but may be completed by template RNA binding.

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