Structural Basis for Alternative Self-Assembly Pathways Leading to Different Human Immunodeficiency Virus Capsid-Like Nanoparticles

被引:0
|
作者
Escrig, Judith [1 ]
Marcos-Alcalde, Iñigo [2 ]
Domínguez-Zotes, Santos [1 ]
Abia, David [3 ]
Gómez-Puertas, Paulino [2 ]
Valbuena, Alejandro [1 ]
Mateu, Mauricio G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Virus Engineering Group, Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa (CSIC-UAM), Campus of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid,28049, Spain
[2] Molecular Modeling Group, Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa (CSIC-UAM), Campus of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid,28049, Spain
[3] Bioinformatics Unit, Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa (CSIC-UAM), Campus of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid,28049, Spain
关键词
Elastomers - Molecular docking - Nanoparticles;
D O I
10.1021/acsnano.4c07948
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The mechanisms that underlie the spontaneous and faithful assembly of virus particles are guiding the design of self-assembling protein-based nanostructures for biomedical or nanotechnological uses. In this study, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) capsid was used as a model to investigate what molecular feature(s) may determine whether a protein nanoparticle with the intended architecture, instead of an aberrant particle, will be self-assembled in vitro. Attempts of using the HIV-1 capsid protein CA for achieving in vitro the self-assembly of cone-shaped nanoparticles that contain CA hexamers and pentamers, similar to authentic viral capsids, had typically yielded hexamer-only tubular particles. We hypothesized that a reduction in the stability of a transient major assembly intermediate, a trimer of CA dimers (ToD), will increase the propensity of CA to assemble in vitro into cone-shaped particles instead of tubes. Certain amino acid substitutions at CA-CA interfaces strongly favored in vitro the assembly of cone-shaped nanoparticles that resembled authentic HIV-1 capsids. All-atom MD simulations indicated that ToDs formed by CA mutants with increased propensity for assembly into cone-shaped particles are destabilized relative to ToDs formed by wt CA or by another mutant that assembles into tubes. The results also indicated that ToD destabilization is mediated by conformational distortion of different CA-CA interfaces, which removes some interprotein interactions within the ToD. A model is proposed to rationalize the linkage between reduced ToD stability and increased propensity for the formation of CA pentamers during particle growth in vitro, favoring the assembly of cone-shaped HIV-1 capsid-like nanoparticles. © 2024 American Chemical Society.
引用
收藏
页码:27465 / 27478
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [1] Self-assembly of nanoparticles into biomimetic capsid-like nanoshells
    Yang, Ming
    Chan, Henry
    Zhao, Gongpu
    Bahng, Joong Hwan
    Zhang, Peijun
    Kral, Petr
    Kotov, Nicholas A.
    NATURE CHEMISTRY, 2017, 9 (03) : 287 - 294
  • [2] Self-assembly of nanoparticles into biomimetic capsid-like nanoshells
    Yang M.
    Chan H.
    Zhao G.
    Bahng J.H.
    Zhang P.
    Král P.
    Kotov N.A.
    Nature Chemistry, 2017, 9 (3) : 287 - 294
  • [3] Self-assembly of dengue virus empty capsid-like particles in solution
    Neves-Martins, Thais C.
    Mebus-Antunes, Nathane C.
    Neto, Carlos H. G.
    Barbosa, Glauce M.
    Almeida, Fabio C. L.
    Caruso, Icaro P.
    Da Poian, Andrea T.
    ISCIENCE, 2023, 26 (03)
  • [4] Investigating scaling effects on virus capsid-like self-assembly using discrete event simulations
    Zhang, Tiequan
    Kim, Woo Tae
    Schwartz, Russell
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NANOBIOSCIENCE, 2007, 6 (03) : 235 - 241
  • [5] Self-assembly in the carboxysome: a viral capsid-like protein shell in bacterial cells
    Yeates, T. O.
    Tsai, Y.
    Tanaka, S.
    Sawaya, M. R.
    Kerfeld, C. A.
    BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY TRANSACTIONS, 2007, 35 : 508 - 511
  • [6] Biomimetic organization:: Octapeptide self-assembly into nanotubes of viral capsid-like dimension
    Valéry, C
    Paternostre, M
    Robert, B
    Gulik-Krzywicki, T
    Narayanan, T
    Dedieu, JC
    Keller, G
    Torres, ML
    Cherif-Cheikh, R
    Calvo, P
    Artzner, F
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2003, 100 (18) : 10258 - 10262
  • [7] Peptide Self-assembly into stable Capsid-Like nanospheres and Co- assembly with DNA to produce smart artificial viruses
    Cao, Meiwen
    Zhang, Zijin
    Zhang, Xiaoyang
    Wang, Yu
    Wu, Jingjing
    Liu, Zhihong
    Sun, Li
    Wang, Dong
    Yue, Tongtao
    Han, Yuchun
    Wang, Yingxiong
    Wang, Yilin
    Wang, Ming
    JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE, 2022, 615 : 395 - 407
  • [8] Peptide Self-Assembly Nanoparticles Loaded with Panobinostat to Activate Latent Human Immunodeficiency Virus
    Kuai, Qiyuan
    Wang, Yu
    Gao, Fenghua
    Qi, Yingqiu
    Wang, Rui
    Wang, Yanbing
    Lu, Xiaofan
    Zhao, Ying
    Nie, Guangjun
    He, Min
    Zhou, Hong
    Jiang, Xingwei
    Ren, Suping
    Yu, Qun
    JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2019, 15 (05) : 979 - 992
  • [9] Methylisatin Structural Isomers Have Different Kinetic Pathways to Self-Assembly
    Silski-Devlin, Angela M.
    Petersen, Jacob P.
    Liu, Jonathan
    Corcelli, Steven A.
    Kandel, S. Alex
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, 2020, 124 (32): : 17717 - 17725
  • [10] Construction of Ribonuclease-Decorated Artificial Virus-like Capsid by Peptide Self-assembly
    Matsuura, Kazunori
    Ota, Junpei
    Fujita, Seiya
    Shiomi, Yuriko
    Inaba, Hiroshi
    JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 2020, 85 (03): : 1668 - 1673