4.7 Article

Dual spatial folds and different local structures of the HIV-1 immunogenic crown in various virus isolates

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 159-170

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.2004.10506992

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Local and global structural properties of the HIV-1 principal neutralizing epitope were studied in terms of NMR spectroscopy data reported in literature for the HIV-Haiti and HIV-RF isolates. To this effect, the NMR-based method comprising a probabilistic model of protein conformation in conjunction with the molecular mechanics and quantum chemical computations was used for determining the ensembles of conformers matching the NMR requirements and energy criteria. As a matter of record, the high resolution 3D structure models were constructed for the HIV-Haiti and HIV-RF immunogenic crowns, and their geometric parameters were collated with the ones of conformers derived previously for describing the conformational features of immunogenic tip of gp120 from Thailand and MN HIV-1 strains. The HIV-1 neutralization site was demonstrated to constitute in water solution highly flexible system sensitive to its environment. This inference is completely valid for the geometric space of dihedral angles where statistically significant differences in local structures of simulated conformers have been found for all virus isolates of interest. In spite of this fact, the stretch analyzed was shown to manifest a certain conservatism in the space of atomic coordinates, building up in four HIV-1 isolates two spatial folds similar to those observed in crystal for the V3 loop peptides bound to different neutralizing Fabs.

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