EMD-1239

Single-particle
14.0 Å
EMD-1239 Deposition: 11/07/2006
Map released: 02/05/2007
Last modified: 24/10/2012
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links

EMD-1239

Infectious bursal disease virus capsid assembly and maturation by structural rearrangements of a transient molecular switch.

EMD-1239

Single-particle
14.0 Å
EMD-1239 Deposition: 11/07/2006
Map released: 02/05/2007
Last modified: 24/10/2012
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Sample Organism: Infectious bursal disease virus
Sample: His-VP2-466 VLP

Deposition Authors: Luque D , Saugar I , Rodriguez JF, Verdaguer N , Garriga D , San Martin C, Velazquez-Muriel JA, Trus BL, Carrascosa JL, Caston JR
Infectious bursal disease virus capsid assembly and maturation by structural rearrangements of a transient molecular switch.
Abstract:
Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV), a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) virus belonging to the Birnaviridae family, is an economically important avian pathogen. The IBDV capsid is based on a single-shelled T=13 lattice, and the only structural subunits are VP2 trimers. During capsid assembly, VP2 is synthesized as a protein precursor, called pVP2, whose 71-residue C-terminal end is proteolytically processed. The conformational flexibility of pVP2 is due to an amphipathic alpha-helix located at its C-terminal end. VP3, the other IBDV major structural protein that accomplishes numerous roles during the viral cycle, acts as a scaffolding protein required for assembly control. Here we address the molecular mechanism that defines the multimeric state of the capsid protein as hexamers or pentamers. We used a combination of three-dimensional cryo-electron microscopy maps at or close to subnanometer resolution with atomic models. Our studies suggest that the key polypeptide element, the C-terminal amphipathic alpha-helix, which acts as a transient conformational switch, is bound to the flexible VP2 C-terminal end. In addition, capsid protein oligomerization is also controlled by the progressive trimming of its C-terminal domain. The coordination of these molecular events correlates viral capsid assembly with different conformations of the amphipathic alpha-helix in the precursor capsid, as a five-alpha-helix bundle at the pentamers or an open star-like conformation at the hexamers. These results, reminiscent of the assembly pathway of positive single-stranded RNA viruses, such as nodavirus and tetravirus, add new insights into the evolutionary relationships of dsRNA viruses.