Abstract
Mature HIV-1 viral particles assemble as a fullerene configuration comprising p24 capsid hexamers, pentamers and dimers. In this paper, we report the X-ray crystal structures of the p24 protein from natural HIV-1 strain (BMJ4) in complex with Fab A10F9, which recognizes a conserved epitope in the C-terminal domain of the BMJ4 p24 protein. Our structures reveal a novel shoulder-to-shoulder p24 dimerization mode that is mediated by an S-S bridge at C177. Consistent with these structures, the shoulder-to-shoulder dimer that was obtained from the BMJ4 strain was also observed in p24 proteins from other strains by the introduction of a cysteine residue at position 177. The potential biological significance was further validated by the introduction of a C177A mutation in the BMJ4 strain, which then displays a low infectivity. Our data suggest that this novel shoulder-to-shoulder dimer interface trapped by this unique S-S bridge could represent a physiologically relevant mode of HIV-1 capsid assembly during virus maturation, although Cys residue itself may not be critical for HIV-I replication.
Publication types
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Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
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Amino Acid Sequence
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Antibodies, Monoclonal / metabolism*
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Capsid / metabolism*
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Crystallography, X-Ray
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HIV Antibodies / metabolism*
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HIV Core Protein p24 / chemistry*
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HIV Core Protein p24 / metabolism
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HIV-1 / metabolism
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments / metabolism
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Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
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Models, Molecular
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Protein Binding
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Protein Multimerization*
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Protein Structure, Tertiary
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Solutions
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Virus Assembly / physiology*
Substances
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Antibodies, Monoclonal
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HIV Antibodies
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HIV Core Protein p24
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Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments
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Solutions
Grants and funding
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation (Grant no. 81172895, 81172885), the National Natural Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars (Grant no. 30925030), the Project 111 of the Ministry of Education (Grant no. B06016), the Science and Technology Major Project of Fujian Province (Grant no. 2010Y4008, 2011J06015) and International Science and Technology Collaborative Program (Grant no. 2010DFB30100, 2011DFG33050), People’s Republic of China. Y.A.Y. acknowledges research grant support from the LHK Foundation (Grant no. R-154-000-450-720). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.