Friday, June 12, 2009
New research by scientists at The Scripps
Research Institute and other institutions provides a close-up look at the
cone-shaped shell that is the hallmark of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV),
revealing how it is held together—and possible ways to break it apart.
Previously, scientists had known that the genetic material within HIV is
enclosed within a shell called the capsid, which is formed by a honeycomb
arrangement of about 250 hexagonal protein building blocks. For HIV to infect
human cells, the virus binds to cell surface receptors, and then the capsid is
delivered into the cytoplasm of the cell.
Now, in an advance, online
issue of the journal Cell published on June 11, 2009, Professor Mark Yeager and
colleagues at The Scripps Research Institute, the University of Virginia, and
the University of Utah describethe first high-resolution molecular structure of
the hexagonal protein building block, called CA, that makes up the HIV capsid.
This detailed description may help scientists identify new ways to block HIV
infection.
Bringing Down the Capsid
Since HIV/AIDS was first
recognized in 1981, several drugs and drug combinations have allowed infected
individuals to live longer and healthier lives. However, resistance to the
existing drugs has created an urgent need for novel therapeutic strategies.
Current drugs target critical steps in the virus life cycle. For
example, protease inhibitors block the protein cleavages that generate viral
components—one of them being the protein CA.
Other possible ways to
block infection would be to prevent formation of the capsid by blocking assembly
of CA molecules or to find a way to disassemble the capsid once it is made.
"Anything that destabilizes the capsid, either by inhibiting assembly or
accelerating disassembly should attenuate or even kill the virus," says Owen
Pornillos, an investigator in Yeager's lab and first author of the Cell paper.
But to destabilize the capsid, it's necessary to know precisely how it
is held together.
Making Crystals
"No one had been able to
visualize the CA hexamer at atomic resolution," says Yeager. "Other groups had
been able to solve structures of individual regions of CA. But it was not clear
from these structures exactly how the CA proteins fit together."
To make
the capsid, sets of six CA protein molecules first form hexamers, which then
associate with one another to build a honeycomb-like shell comprised of about
250 hexamers. The ends of the shell are closed by insertion of seven and five CA
protein pentamers, yielding the characteristic cone-like appearance of the
capsid.
In 2007, Yeager's group managed to view the CA hexamers by a
type of electron microscopy in which the samples are quick frozen in buffers,
which preserves the inherent structure of proteins. That study provided the
first glimpse of how CA proteins are arranged in the capsid. (The first author
of the 2007 article was Barbie Ganser-Pornillos, Owen Pornillos' wife, who was
also involved in the current study.)
In order to view the CA hexamer at
even higher resolution, Yeager's group turned to X-ray crystallography. This
technique requires growing 3D crystals of a molecule and then scattering a beam
of X-rays off the crystals, which are recorded on a detector. Computational
methods are then used to interpret the scattering patterns to calculate the
position of every atom in the crystallized molecule.
But growing large,
3D crystals of the CA hexamer was no easy feat. The two ends of each CA protein
molecule are held together by a "floppy" bridge, which precluded formation of
orderly arrays of CA hexamers to form 3D crystals.
To overcome the
problem, Pornillos and Yeager turned to molecular biology. They engineered CA
proteins that would form sturdy chemical links between them, relying on the 2007
structure as their roadmap to determine exactly where to place the links.
"Our work takes advantage of so-called hybrid methods—molecular biology,
biochemistry, electron microscopy, and X-ray crystallography," says Yeager.
"These methods are synergistic. The EM results guided the molecular biology to
engineer stable CA hexamers that were then amenable to 3D crystallization and
X-ray structure analysis at atomic resolution."
The structure they
obtained provided a view of the CA hexamer at an unprecedented resolution of
two-Ångstrom (one Ångstrom equals one ten-billionth of a meter).
A
Close-Up Look
All proteins are composed of linear chains of amino
acids—with one end called the N-terminus and the opposite end the
C-terminus—that are folded in three-dimensional shapes. In the CA protein, amino
acid chains are twisted into several rods, called a-helices, with
extensions—called side chains—that protrude from the main chain to interact with
other folded regions of the protein.
The two-Ångstrom structure showed
the positioning of these a-helices and, for the first time, the location of the
atoms in the side chains. "We could precisely delineate all the chemical
interactions that stabilize the hexamer," says Yeager.
The center of the
CA hexamer is formed by 6 N-terminal ends of the CA protein subunits. The
C-terminal domains form a "floppy" belt around this central core, connecting
adjacent hexamers. The fact that the belt is not held rigidly in place, helps
explain how the honeycomb shape of the capsid forms. "The curvature of the
capsid is not constant," says Pornillos. "Now we can see in atomic detail how
flexibility in CA makes this happen."
The group discovered another set
of interactions critical to stabilizing the capsid—connections between the
N-terminal and C-terminal ends of adjacent CA protein molecules in one hexamer.
"Think of the fingers of one hand as the N-terminal domain and the palm as the
C-terminal," says Yeager. "Imagine the fingers of one hand being cradled in the
palm of the other, and so on as if you had six hands in a ring."
Knowing
precisely how and where CA proteins interact gives researchers clues on how to
interfere with these connections. One approach is to design small molecules that
can insert themselves at strategic positions, impeding capsid assembly or making
the capsid less stable.
While finding HIV therapies is a main driver for
Yeager's work, he points out that it also provides fundamental insights into
biology. "Determining the assembly of a relatively simple structure like the
capsid of a virus can help us understand how more complex biological structures
inside the cell are organized," he explains.
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Scripps
Research Institute