4.6 Article

Combined structural, biochemical and cellular evidence demonstrates that both FGDF motifs in alphavirus nsP3 are required for efficient replication

期刊

OPEN BIOLOGY
卷 6, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsob.160078

关键词

stress response; protein structure-function; virus-host interaction; innate immunity

资金

  1. China Scholarship Council [201406760034]
  2. Swedish Cancer Foundation [CAN 2012/789]
  3. Swedish Research Council [621-2014-4718]
  4. Swedish Cancer Society [CAN 2015-653, 521-2013-3559]
  5. European Community [283570]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent findings have highlighted the role of the Old World alphavirus nonstructural protein 3 (nsP3) as a host defence modulator that functions by disrupting stress granules, subcellular phase-dense RNA/protein structures formed upon environmental stress. This disruption mechanism was largely explained through nsP3-mediated recruitment of the host G3BP protein via two tandem FGDF motifs. Here, we present the 1.9 angstrom resolution crystal structure of the NTF2-like domain of G3BP-1 in complex with a 25-residue peptide derived from Semliki Forest virus nsP3 (nsP3-25). The structure reveals a poly-complex of G3BP-1 dimers interconnected through the FGDF motifs in nsP3-25. Although in vitro and in vivo binding studies revealed a hierarchical interaction of the two FGDF motifs with G3BP-1, viral growth curves clearly demonstrated that two intact FGDF motifs are required for efficient viral replication. Chikungunya virus nsP3 also binds G3BP dimers via a hierarchical interaction, which was found to be critical for viral replication. These results highlight a conserved molecular mechanism in host cell modulation.

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