1 research outputs found
Tyrosine Cross-Linking Reveals Interfacial Dynamics in Adeno-Associated Viral Capsids during Infection
Viral capsid dynamics are often observed during infectious
events
such as cell surface attachment, entry and genome release. Structural
analysis of adeno-associated virus (AAV), a helper-dependent parvovirus,
revealed a cluster of surface-exposed tyrosine residues at the icosahedral
two-fold symmetry axis. We exploited the latter observation to carry
out selective oxidation of Tyr residues, which yielded cross-linked
viral protein (VP) subunit dimers, effectively “stitching”
together the AAV capsid two-fold interface. Characterization of different
Tyr-to-Phe mutants confirmed that the formation of cross-linked VP
dimers is mediated by dityrosine adducts and requires the Tyr704 residue,
which crosses over from one neighboring VP subunit to the other. When
compared to unmodified capsids, Tyr-cross-linked AAV displayed decreased
transduction efficiency in cell culture. Surprisingly, further biochemical
and quantitative microscopy studies revealed that restraining the
two-fold interface hinders externalization of buried VP N-termini,
which contain a phospholipase A2 domain and nuclear localization sequences
critical for infection. These adverse effects caused by tyrosine oxidation
support the notion that interfacial dynamics at the AAV capsid two-fold
symmetry axis play a role in externalization of VP N-termini during
infection