4.8 Article

Reverse transcription-associated dephosphorylation of hepadnavirus nucleocapsids

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0502138102

Keywords

hepatitis B virus; viral maturation; posttranslational modification; tandem mass spectrometry; vibrational cooling MALDI-Fourier transform MS

Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P41 RR10888, P41 RR010888, S10 RR15942] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI043453, R01 AI43453] Funding Source: Medline

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Hepatitis B viruses are pararetroviruses that contain a partially dsDNA genome and replicate this DNA through an RNA intermediate (the pregenomic RNA, pgRNA) by reverse transcription. Viral assembly begins with the packaging of the pgRNA into nucleo-capsids (NCs), with subsequent reverse transcription within NCs converting the pgRNA into the characteristic dsDNA genome. Only NCs containing this dsDNA (the so-called mature NCs) are enveloped by the viral envelope proteins and secreted as virions; immature NCs, i.e., those containing pgRNA or immature reverse transcription intermediates, are excluded from virion formation. This phenomenon is thought to be caused by the emergence of an intrinsic maturation signal only on the mature NCs. To define the maturation signal, we have devised a method to separate mature from immature duck hepatitis B virus NCs and have compared them to NCs derived from secreted virions. Detailed mass spectrometric analyses revealed that the core protein from immature NCs was phosphorylated on at least six sites, whereas the core protein from mature NCs and that from secreted virions was entirely dephosphorylated. These results, together with the known requirement of core phosphorylation for pgRNA packaging and DNA synthesis, suggest that the NC undergoes a dynamic change in phosphorylation state to fulfill its multiple roles at different stages of viral replication. Although phosphorylation of the NCs is required for efficient RNA packaging and DNA synthesis by the immature NCs, dephosphorylation of the mature NCs may trigger envelopment and secretion.

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