4.6 Article

Disulfide Linkage and Structure of Highly Stable Yeastderived Virus-like Particles of Murine Polyomavirus

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 15, Pages 10411-10418

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.484162

Keywords

Protein Self-assembly; Protein Stability; Viral Protein; Virus Assembly; Yeast

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [GRK 1026]

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Background: Polyoma virus-like particles produced in vivo (yVLPs) are more stable than those assembled in vitro. Results: yVLPs exhibit higher disulfide connectivity and additional N-terminal structural features in VP1. Conclusion: An ordered network of cystine-bridged VP1 N-terminal peptides contributes to polyoma virus capsid stability. Significance: These results suggest a role for intracellular components in optimizing capsid assembly. VP1 is the major coat protein of murine polyomavirus and forms virus-like particles (VLPs) in vitro. VLPs consist of 72 pentameric VP1 subunits held together by a terminal clamp structure that is further stabilized by disulfide bonds and chelation of calcium ions. Yeast-derived VLPs (yVLPs) assemble intracellularly in vivo during recombinant protein production. These in vivo assembled yVLPs differ in several properties from VLPs assembled in vitro from bacterially produced pentamers. We found several intermolecular disulfide linkages in yVLPs involving 5 of the 6 cysteines of VP1 (Cys(115)-Cys(20), Cys(12)-Cys(20), Cys(16)-Cys(16), Cys(12)/ Cys(16)-Cys(115), and Cys(274)-Cys(274)), indicating a highly coordinated disulfide network within the in vivo assembled particles involving the N-terminal region of VP1. Cryoelectron microscopy revealed structured termini not resolved in the published crystal structure of the bacterially expressed VLP that appear to clamp the pentameric subunits together. These structural features are probably the reason for the observed higher stability of in vivo assembled yVLPs compared with in vitro assembled bacterially expressed VLPs as monitored by increased thermal stability, higher resistance to trypsin cleavage, and a higher activation enthalpy of the disassembly reaction. This high stability is decreased following disassembly of yVLPs and subsequent in vitro reassembly, suggesting a role for cellular components in optimal assembly.

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