4.5 Article

Linker and/or transmembrane regions of influenza A/Group-1, A/Group-2, and type B virus hemagglutinins are packed differently within trimers

期刊

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-BIOMEMBRANES
卷 1808, 期 7, 页码 1843-1854

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamem.2011.03.005

关键词

Hemagglutinin; Viral membrane; Linker and transmembrane region; MALDI-TOF MS; Phylogenetic groups of influenza virus; Molecular modeling

资金

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [09-04-01160, 10-04-91333]
  2. Russian Ministry of Science and Education [MK-8439.2010.4]
  3. DFG [VE 141/10-1]

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Influenza virus hemagglutinin is a homotrimeric spike glycoprotein crucial for virions' attachment, membrane fusion, and assembly reactions. X-ray crystallography data are available for hemagglutinin ectodomains of various types/subtypes but not for anchoring segments. To get structural information for the linker and transmembrane regions of hemagglutinin, influenza A (H1-H16 subtypes except H8 and H15) and B viruses were digested with bromelain or subtilisin Carlsberg, either within virions or in non-ionic detergent micelles. Proteolytical fragments were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Within virions, hemagglutinins of most influenza A/Group-1 and type B virus strains were more susceptible to digestion with bromelain and/or subtilisin compared to A/Group-2 hemagglutinins. The cleavage sites were always located in the hemagglutinin linker sequence. In detergent, 1) bromelain cleaved hemagglutinin of every influenza A subtype in the linker region; 2) subtilisin cleaved Group-2 hemagglutinins in the linker region; 3) subtilisin cleaved Group-1 hemagglutinins in the transmembrane region; 4) both enzymes cleaved influenza B virus hemagglutinin in the transmembrane region. We propose that the A/Group-2 hemagglutinin linker and/or transmembrane regions are more tightly associated within trimers than type A/Group-1 and particularly type B ones. This hypothesis is underpinned by spatial trimeric structure modeling performed for transmembrane regions of both Group-1 and Group-2 hemagglutinin representatives. Differential S-acylation of the hemagglutinin C-terminal anchoring segment with palmitate/stearate residues possibly contributes to fine tuning of transmembrane trimer packing and stabilization since decreased stearate amount correlated with deeper digestion of influenza B and some A/Group-1 hemagglutinins. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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