4.7 Article

Highly Basic Clusters in the Herpes Simplex Virus 1 Nuclear Egress Complex Drive Membrane Budding by Inducing Lipid Ordering

Journal

MBIO
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01548-21

Keywords

HSV-1; nuclear egress; membrane interactions; membrane budding; membrane curvature; electron spin resonance; neutron reflectometry; small-angle X-ray scattering; charge clusters; electrostatics; herpes simplex virus; herpesviruses; membrane deformation; complex; phosphorylation

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM111795, R01AI147625, R01GM067180, R01GM123779, P41GM103521, P30GM133894, P30 NS047243]
  2. NSF [DMR1808459]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute [55108533]
  4. Rosenberg Fellowship (Tufts University School of Medicine)
  5. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-76SF00515]
  6. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  7. National Institute of Standards and Technology [DMR-2010792]
  8. NSF at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) [ACI-1445606]
  9. National Science Foundation [DMR-2010792, ACI-1053575]

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The viral nuclear egress complex (NEC) mediates the escape of herpesvirus capsids from the nucleus by deforming the membrane, primarily through highly basic membrane-proximal regions (MPRs) that alter lipid order and promote negative curvature. Phosphorylation of an MPR by a viral kinase inhibits membrane-budding activity. Understanding these interactions could lead to therapeutic strategies against herpesvirus infections.
During replication of herpesviruses, capsids escape from the nucleus into the cytoplasm by budding at the inner nuclear membrane. This unusual process is mediated by the viral nuclear egress complex (NEC) that deforms the membrane around the capsid by oligomerizing into a hexagonal, membrane-bound scaffold. Here, we found that highly basic membrane-proximal regions (MPRs) of the NEC alter lipid order by inserting into the lipid headgroups and promote negative Gaussian curvature. We also find that the electrostatic interactions between the MPRs and the membranes are essential for membrane deformation. One of the MPRs is phosphorylated by a viral kinase during infection, and the corresponding phosphomimicking mutations block capsid nuclear egress. We show that the same phosphomimicking mutations disrupt the NEC-membrane interactions and inhibit NEC-mediated budding in vitro, providing a biophysical explanation for the in vivo phenomenon. Our data suggest that the NEC generates negative membrane curvature by both lipid ordering and protein scaffolding and that phosphorylation acts as an off switch that inhibits the membrane-budding activity of the NEC to prevent capsid-less budding. IMPORTANCE Herpesviruses are large viruses that infect nearly all vertebrates and some invertebrates and cause lifelong infections in most of the world's population. During replication, herpesviruses export their capsids from the nucleus into the cytoplasm by an unusual mechanism in which the viral nuclear egress complex (NEC) deforms the nuclear membrane around the capsid. However, how membrane deformation is achieved is unclear. Here, we show that the NEC from herpes simplex virus 1, a prototypical herpesvirus, uses clusters of positive charges to bind membranes and order membrane lipids. Reducing the positive charge or introducing negative charges weakens the membrane deforming ability of the NEC. We propose that the virus employs electrostatics to deform nuclear membrane around the capsid and can control this process by changing the NEC charge through phosphorylation. Blocking NEC-membrane interactions could be exploited as a therapeutic strategy.

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