4.8 Article

Structural rearrangements in the membrane penetration protein of a non-enveloped virus

Journal

NATURE
Volume 430, Issue 7003, Pages 1053-1058

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature02836

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI053174-02, R01 AI053174-01A1] Funding Source: Medline

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Non-enveloped virus particles (those that lack a lipid-bilayer membrane) must breach the membrane of a target host cell to gain access to its cytoplasm. So far, the molecular mechanism of this membrane penetration step has resisted structural analysis. The spike protein VP4 is a principal component in the entry apparatus of rotavirus, a non-enveloped virus that causes gastroenteritis and kills 440,000 children each year(1). Trypsin cleavage of VP4 primes the virus for entry by triggering a rearrangement that rigidifies the VP4 spikes(2). We have determined the crystal structure, at 3.2 Angstrom resolution, of the main part of VP4 that projects from the virion. The crystal structure reveals a coiled-coil stabilized trimer. Comparison of this structure with the two-fold clustered VP4 spikes in a similar to12 Angstrom resolution image reconstruction from electron cryomicroscopy of trypsin-primed virions shows that VP4 also undergoes a second rearrangement, in which the oligomer reorganizes and each subunit folds back on itself, translocating a potential membrane-interaction peptide from one end of the spike to the other. This rearrangement resembles the conformational transitions of membrane fusion proteins of enveloped viruses(3-6).

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