20 research outputs found
High Cooperativity of the SV40 Major Capsid Protein VP1 in Virus Assembly
SV40 is a small, non enveloped DNA virus with an icosahedral capsid of 45 nm. The outer shell is composed of pentamers of the major capsid protein, VP1, linked via their flexible carboxy-terminal arms. Its morphogenesis occurs by assembly of capsomers around the viral minichromosome. However the steps leading to the formation of mature virus are poorly understood. Intermediates of the assembly reaction could not be isolated from cells infected with wt SV40. Here we have used recombinant VP1 produced in insect cells for in vitro assembly studies around supercoiled heterologous plasmid DNA carrying a reporter gene. This strategy yields infective nanoparticles, affording a simple quantitative transduction assay. We show that VP1 assembles under physiological conditions into uniform nanoparticles of the same shape, size and CsCl density as the wild type virus. The stoichiometry is one DNA molecule per capsid. VP1 deleted in the C-arm, which is unable to assemble but can bind DNA, was inactive indicating genuine assembly rather than non-specific DNA-binding. The reaction requires host enzymatic activities, consistent with the participation of chaperones, as recently shown. Our results demonstrate dramatic cooperativity of VP1, with a Hill coefficient of ∼6. These findings suggest that assembly may be a concerted reaction. We propose that concerted assembly is facilitated by simultaneous binding of multiple capsomers to a single DNA molecule, as we have recently reported, thus increasing their local concentration. Emerging principles of SV40 assembly may help understanding assembly of other complex systems. In addition, the SV40-based nanoparticles described here are potential gene therapy vectors that combine efficient gene delivery with safety and flexibility
Effect of Calcium Ions and Disulfide Bonds on Swelling of Virus Particles
Multivalent ions affect the structure and organization of virus nanoparticles. Wild-type simian virus 40 (wt SV40) is a nonenveloped virus belonging to the polyomavirus family, whose external diameter is 48.4 nm. Calcium ions and disulfide bonds are involved in the stabilization of its capsid and are playing a role in its assembly and disassembly pathways. Using solution small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), we found that the volume of wt SV40 swelled by about 17% when both of its calcium ions were chelated by ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethylether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid and its disulfide bonds were reduced by dithiothreitol. By applying osmotic stress, the swelling could be reversed. DNA-containing virus-like particles behaved in a similar way. The results provide insight into the structural role of calcium ions and disulfide bonds in holding the capsid proteins in compact conformation
Effect of Calcium Ions and Disulfide Bonds on Swelling of Virus Particles
Multivalent ions affect the structure and organization of virus nanoparticles. Wild-type simian virus 40 (wt SV40) is a nonenveloped virus belonging to the polyomavirus family, whose external diameter is 48.4 nm. Calcium ions and disulfide bonds are involved in the stabilization of its capsid and are playing a role in its assembly and disassembly pathways. Using solution small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), we found that the volume of wt SV40 swelled by about 17% when both of its calcium ions were chelated by ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethylether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid and its disulfide bonds were reduced by dithiothreitol. By applying osmotic stress, the swelling could be reversed. DNA-containing virus-like particles behaved in a similar way. The results provide insight into the structural role of calcium ions and disulfide bonds in holding the capsid proteins in compact conformation
Cellular Transcription Factor Sp1 Recruits Simian Virus 40 Capsid Proteins to the Viral Packaging Signal, ses
Simian virus 40 (SV40) capsid assembly occurs in the nucleus. All three capsid proteins bind DNA nonspecifically, raising the dilemma of how they attain specificity to the SV40 minichromosome in the presence of a large excess of genomic DNA. The SV40 packaging signal, ses, which is required for assembly, is composed of multiple DNA elements that bind transcription factor Sp1. Our previous studies showed that Sp1 participates in SV40 assembly and that it cooperates in DNA binding with VP2/3. We hypothesized that Sp1 recruits the capsid proteins to the viral minichromosome, conferring upon them specific DNA recognition. Here, we have tested the hypothesis. Computer analysis showed that the combination of six tandem GC boxes at ses is not found at cellular promoters and therefore is unique to SV40. Cooperativity in DNA binding between Sp1 and VP2/3 was not abolished at even a 1,000-fold excess of cellular DNA, providing strong support for the recruitment hypothesis. Sp1 also binds VP1 and cooperates with VP1 in DNA binding. VP1 pentamers (VP1(5)) avidly interact with VP2/3, utilizing the same VP2/3 domain as described for polyomavirus. We conclude that VP1(5)-VP2/3 building blocks are recruited by Sp1 to ses, where they form the nucleation center for capsid assembly. By this mechanism the virus ensures that capsid formation is initiated at a single site around its minichromosome. Sp1 enhances the formation of SV40 pseudovirions in vitro, providing additional support for the model. Analyses of Sp1 and VP3 deletion mutants showed that Sp1 and VP2/3 bind one another and cooperate in DNA binding through their DNA-binding domains, with additional contacts outside these domains. VP1 contacts Sp1 at residues outside the Sp1 DNA-binding domain. These and additional data allowed us to propose a molecular model for the VP1(5)-VP2/3-DNA-Sp1 complex
Crystallization, Reentrant Melting, and Resolubilization of Virus Nanoparticles
Crystallization
is a fundamental and ubiquitous process that is
well understood in the case of atoms or small molecules, but its outcome
is still hard to predict in the case of nanoparticles or macromolecular
complexes. Controlling the organization of virus nanoparticles into
a variety of 3D supramolecular architectures is often done by multivalent
ions and is of great interest for biomedical applications such as
drug or gene delivery and biosensing, as well as for bionanomaterials
and catalysis. In this paper, we show that slow dialysis, over several
hours, of wild-type Simian Virus 40 (wt SV40) nanoparticle solution
against salt solutions containing MgCl<sub>2</sub>, with or without
added NaCl, results in wt SV40 nanoparticles arranged in a body cubic
center crystal structure with <i>Im</i>3<i>m</i> space group, as a thermodynamic product, in coexistence with soluble
wt SV40 nanoparticles. The nanoparticle crystals formed above a critical
MgCl<sub>2</sub> concentrations. Reentrant melting and resolubilization
of the virus nanoparticles took place when the MgCl<sub>2</sub> concentrations
passed a second threshold. Using synchrotron solution X-ray scattering
we determined the structures and the mass fraction of the soluble
and crystal phases as a function of MgCl<sub>2</sub> and NaCl concentrations.
A thermodynamic model, which balances the chemical potentials of the
Mg<sup>2+</sup> ions in each of the possible states, explains our
observations. The model reveals the mechanism of both the crystallization
and the reentrant melting and resolubilization and shows that counterion
entropy is the main driving force for both processes
pH stability and disassembly mechanism of wild-type simian virus 40
Viruses are remarkable self-assembled nanobiomaterial-based machines, exposed to a wide range of pH values. Extreme pH values can induce dramatic structural changes, critical for the function of the virus nanoparticles, including assembly and genome uncoating. Tuning cargo–capsid interactions is essential for designing virus-based delivery systems. Here we show how pH controls the structure and activity of wild-type simian virus 40 (wtSV40) and the interplay between its cargo and capsid. Using cryo-TEM and solution X-ray scattering, we found that wtSV40 was stable between pH 5.5 and 9, and only slightly swelled with increasing pH. At pH 3, the particles aggregated, while capsid protein pentamers continued to coat the virus cargo but lost their positional correlations. Infectivity was only partly lost after the particles were returned to pH 7. At pH 10 or higher, the particles were unstable, lost their infectivity, and disassembled. Using time-resolved experiments we discovered that disassembly began by swelling of the particles, poking a hole in the capsid through which the genetic cargo escaped, followed by a slight shrinking of the capsids and complete disassembly. These findings provide insight into the fundamental intermolecular forces, essential for SV40 function, and for designing virus-based nanobiomaterials, including delivery systems and antiviral drugs
Simian virus 40 induces lamin A/C fluctuations and nuclear envelope deformation during cell entry
In non-dividing cells, the nuclear pore complex provides the major route for viruses and viral genomes to enter the nucleus. However, SV40 infection of non-dividing cells is very inefficient suggesting that the nuclear envelope prevents most viral genomes from entering the nucleus. Surprisingly, we observed that following infection of quiescent CV-1 cells with SV40, the nuclear envelope was dramatically deformed, as seen by immunohistochemistry detection of lamins A/C, B1, B2 and the nuclear pore complexes. Accompanying deformation of the nuclear envelope, we also observed fluctuations in the levels of lamin A/C, dephosphorylation of an unknown epitope on lamin A/C and accumulation of lamin A in the cytoplasm. The nuclear envelope deformations occured just prior to and during nuclear entry of the viral genome and were transient and the spherical structure of the nuclear envelope was restored subsequent to nuclear entry. Nuclear envelope deformation and lamin A/C dephosphorylation required caspase-6 cleavage of a small fraction of lamin A/C. Taken together the results suggest that virus-induced alterations of the nuclear lamina, are involved in the nuclear entry of the SV40 genome in non-dividing cells. We propose that SV40 utilize this unique, previously unknown mechanism for direct trafficking of its genome from the ER to the nucleus
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p53 elevation in human cells halt SV40 infection by inhibiting T-ag expression
SV40 large T-antigen (T-ag) has been known for decades to inactivate the tumor suppressor p53 by sequestration and additional mechanisms. Our present study revealed that the struggle between p53 and T-ag begins very early in the infection cycle. We found that p53 is activated early after SV40 infection and defends the host against the infection. Using live cell imaging and single cell analyses we found that p53 dynamics are variable among individual cells, with only a subset of cells activating p53 immediately after SV40 infection. This cell-to-cell variabilty had clear consequences on the outcome of the infection. None of the cells with elevated p53 at the beginning of the infection proceeded to express T-ag, suggesting a p53-dependent decision between abortive and productive infection. In addition, we show that artificial elevation of p53 levels prior to the infection reduces infection efficiency, supporting a role for p53 in defending against SV40. We further found that the p53-mediated host defense mechanism against SV40 is not facilitated by apoptosis nor via interferon-stimulated genes. Instead p53 binds to the viral DNA at the T-ag promoter region, prevents its transcriptional activation by Sp1, and halts the progress of the infection. These findings shed new light on the long studied struggle between SV40 T-ag and p53, as developed during virus-host coevolution. Our studies indicate that the fate of SV40 infection is determined as soon as the viral DNA enters the nucleus, before the onset of viral gene expression
Parameters affecting the in vitro packaging reaction.
<p>Effect of temperature (A) and concentration of monovalent salts (B) present during the re-association reaction (step B) on the yield, measured as titer of luc transducing units.</p