The maturation process of pVP2 requires assembly of infectious bursal disease virus capsids

Archive ouverte

Chevalier, Christophe | Lepault, Jean | Erk, Inge | da Costa, Bruno | Delmas, Bernard

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Microbiology -

International audience. Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) is a nonenveloped avian virus with a two-segment double-stranded RNA genome. Its T=13 icosahedral capsid is most probably assembled with 780 subunits of VP2 and 600 copies of VP3 and has a diameter of about 60 nm. VP1, the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, resides inside the viral particle. Using a baculovirus expression system, we first observed that expression of the pVP2-VP4-VP3 polyprotein encoded by the genomic segment IBDA results mainly in the formation of tubules with a diameter of about 50 nm and composed of pVP2, the precursor of VP2. Very few virus-like particles (VLPs) and VP4 tubules with a diameter of about 25 nm were also identified. The inefficiency of VLP assembly was further investigated by expression of additional IBDA-derived constructs. Expression of pVP2 without any other polyprotein components results in the formation of isometric particles with a diameter of about 30 nm. VLPs were observed mainly when a large exogeneous polypeptide sequence (the green fluorescent protein sequence) was fused to the VP3 C-terminal domain. Large numbers of VLPs were visualized by electron microscopy, and single particles were shown to be fluorescent by standard and confocal microscopy analysis. Moreover, the final maturation process converting pVP2 into the VP2 mature form was observed on generated VLPs. We therefore conclude that the correct scaffolding of the VP3 can be artificially induced to promote the formation of VLPs and that the final processing of pVP2 to VP2 is controlled by this particular assembly. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the engineering of a morphogenesis switch to control a particular type of capsid protein assembly.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Contraindre les protéines de capside de birnavirus à s'autoassembler en pseudo-particules

Archive ouverte | Chevalier, Christophe | CCSD

National audience. L'expression des protéines de capside d'un virus non enveloppé aboutit généralement à leur auto-assemblage en pseudo-particules virales dont la géométrie est semblable à celle du virus. Les birnav...

Structural Peptides of a Nonenveloped Virus Are Involved in Assembly and Membrane Translocation

Archive ouverte | Chevalier, Christophe | CCSD

International audience. The capsid of infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV), a nonenveloped virus of the family Birnaviridae, has a T‫31؍‬l icosahedral shell constituted by a single protein, VP2, and several disord...

Les relations structurales entre birnavirus et autres virus icosaédriques à ARN

Archive ouverte | Coulibaly, Fasseli | CCSD

National audience. Les particules des virus à ARN double brin (ARNdb) sont compétentes pour la transcription et doivent traverser une membrane cellulaire pour fonctionner dans le cytoplasme de la cellule cible. Parm...

Chargement des enrichissements...