| Literature DB >> 29414851 |
Kristin N Parent1, Jason R Schrad2, Gino Cingolani3,4.
Abstract
The majority of viruses on Earth form capsids built by multiple copies of one or more types of a coat protein arranged with 532 symmetry, generating an icosahedral shell. This highly repetitive structure is ideal to closely pack identical protein subunits and to enclose the nucleic acid genomes. However, the icosahedral capsid is not merely a passive cage but undergoes dynamic events to promote packaging, maturation and the transfer of the viral genome into the host. These essential processes are often mediated by proteinaceous complexes that interrupt the shell's icosahedral symmetry, providing a gateway through the capsid. In this review, we take an inventory of molecular structures observed either internally, or at the 5-fold vertices of icosahedral DNA viruses that infect bacteria, archea and eukaryotes. Taking advantage of the recent revolution in cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and building upon a wealth of crystallographic structures of individual components, we review the design principles of non-icosahedral structural components that interrupt icosahedral symmetry and discuss how these macromolecules play vital roles in genome packaging, ejection and host receptor-binding.Entities:
Keywords: X-ray crystallography; archeal viruses; bacteriophages; cryo-EM; cryo-ET; giant viruses; icosahedral symmetry; portal protein; symmetry mismatch
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29414851 PMCID: PMC5850374 DOI: 10.3390/v10020067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Inventory of 3D structures of portal proteins deposited in the Electron Microscopy Data Bank (EMDB) and PDB databases.
| Virus | Protomer | Accession Number(s) | Cryo-EM | X-ray | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EMDB | PDB | |||||
| P22 (MV) | 82.7 | 5049, 5050, 5051, 1482, 1483 | 5JJ3, 4V4K | +++ | +++ | |
| P22 (PC) | 82.7 | 5375 * | 5JJ1 | +++ | +++ | |
| Phi29 | 35.9 | 1IJG, 1JNB, 1H5W, 1FOU | +++ | |||
| T7 | 59.1 | 1231, 2356, 2717, 5690 | 3J4A | +++ | ||
| SPP1 | 57.3 | 2993, 2994 1021 | 2JES | +++ | +++ | |
| HK97-like | 32.9 | 3KDR | +++ | |||
| G20C | 49.7 | 4ZJN | +++ | |||
| T4 | 61.0 | 6324 | 3JA7 | +++ | ||
| p2 | 39.1 | 2463 | +++ | |||
| HSV-1 | 74.2 | 5260 ** 5261 *** | +++ | |||
“+++” indicates the technique used to solve the structure; * Visualized in situ (EMD-1827) and symmetrized; ** Visualized in situ (EMD-5255) and symmetrized; *** Visualized in situ (EMD-5255) and unsymmetrized.
Figure 1Crystal structures of in vitro assembled portal proteins deposited in the RCSB Protein Data Bank. (a) Quaternary structures of portal proteins from Podoviridae, Siphoviridae and Myoviridae shown as side and top views. All structures are aligned with respect to the Mature Virion (MV)-portal protein of P22 and are shown in scale with the protomer “A” colored in red and the rest of the oligomer in gray; (b) Tertiary structures of portal protein protomers color-coded to highlight the stalk (magenta), stem (blue), wing (green), crown (orange) and barrel (red). Except for P22 portal protein, which is shown only in the MV-conformation, all other portal protomers are in scale.
Inventory of asymmetric cryo-EM and cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) structures of DNA bacteriophages that contain protein complexes that break icosahedral symmetry.
| Virus | EMDB Accession Number(s) | Cryo-EM | Cryo-ET | Year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phi29 | 1506, 5010 | +++ | 2009 | ||
| Phi29 | 1419, 1420 | +++ | 2008 | ||
| Phi29 | 6560 | +++ | 2016 | ||
| CUS-3 | 5946 | +++ | 2014 | ||
| Sf6 | 5730 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| T7 | 5566–5573 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| T7 | 5534–5537 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| C1 | 5446 | +++ | 2012 | ||
| P22 | 1119 | +++ | 2005 | ||
| P22 | 1220 | +++ | 2006 | ||
| P22 | 1222 | +++ | 2006 | ||
| P22 | 1827 | +++ | 2011 | ||
| P22 | 5348, 5231 | +++ | 2011 | ||
| P22 | 8258–6261 | +++ | 2016 | ||
| P22 | 8005 | +++ | 2016 | ||
| P-SSP7 | 1707 | +++ | 2010 | ||
| P-SSP7 | 6427 | +++ | 2016 | ||
| P-SSP7 | 1714, 1715 | +++ | 2010 | ||
| P-SSP7 | 3131 | +++ | |||
| Syn5 | 5743–5746 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| ε15 | 1175 | +++ | 2005 | ||
| ε15 | 5203, 5204 | +++ | 2010 | ||
| ε15 | 5207–5209 | +++ | 2010 | ||
| ε15 | 5216–5219 | +++ | 2010 | ||
| BPP-1 | 1619 | +++ | 2010 | ||
| N4 | 1475 | +++ | 2009 | ||
| PRD-1 | 3548–3550 | +++ | 2017 | ||
| PRD-1 | 2438–2440 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| K1E | 1336 | +++ | 2007 | ||
| K1-5 | 1337 | +++ | 2007 | ||
| PhiKZ | 1415 | +++ | 2007 | ||
| T4 | 1572, 1573 | +++ | 2008 | ||
| T4 | 6323 | +++ | 2015 | ||
| T4 | 2774, 6078–6083 | +++ | 2015 | ||
| P2 | 2463, 2464 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| Araucaria | 2335–2338 | +++ | 2013 | ||
| 1358 | 2820 | +++ | 2016 | ||
| TW1 | 7070, 8854, 8867, 8868 | +++ | 2017 | ||
| ssDNA | ΦX174 | 7033, 8862 | +++ | 2017 |
“+++” indicates the EM technique used to solve the structure.
Inventory of asymmetric cryo-EM/cryo-ET structures of eukaryotic and archeal viruses with DNA genomes that contain protein complexes that break icosahedral symmetry.
| Virus | EMDB Accession Number(s) | Cryo-EM | Cryo-ET | Year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Archeal | APBV1 * | 3857–3859 | +++ | 2017 | |
| His1 * | 6220–6222 | +++ | 2015 | ||
| Eukaryotic | HSV-1 | 5452, 5453 | +++ | 2012 | |
| HSV-1 | 5255, 5260, 5261 | +++ | 2011 | ||
| HSV-1 | 1305–1308 | +++ | 2007 | ||
| KSHV | 1320 | +++ | 2007 | ||
| Faustovirus | 8144, 8145 | +++ | 2016 | ||
| PBCV-1 | 1597 | +++ | 2009 | ||
| PBCV-1 | 5384 | +++ | 2012 | ||
| CroV ** | 8748 | +++ | 2017 | ||
| Mimivirus ** | 5039 | +++ | 2009 | ||
| Samba virus ** | 8599 | +++ | 2017 | ||
| Chilo Iridescent Virus ** | 1580 | +++ | 2009 |
“+++” indicates the EM technique used to solve the structure; * Non-icosahedral virus; ** Giant Viruses.
Figure 2Asymmetric cryo-EM reconstructions of bacterial, archeal and eukaryotic viruses with unique vertices. (a) The portal protein (colored in red) occupies of a 5-fold vertex of the icosahedral capsid in P22 (EMD-8005), T4 (EMD-2774) and HSV-1 (EMD-5255); (b) The lemon-shaped archeal virus His1 is shown with solely the capsid structure from cryo-EM (EMD-6223) and a red dashed box highlighting the unique vertex; currently no portal or other data are available for this unique assembly site; (c) Two examples of viruses with unique vertices (in magenta) induced upon genome ejection: PRD1 (EMD-5984) and ФX174 (EMD-7033). For the latter, the crystallographic structure of the H-protein (PDB 4JPP) is modeled to scale at a 5-fold vertex and is also shown enlarged; (d) The Mimivirus capsid (EMD-5039) is rendered with density for the starfish seal highlighted in cyan and is rotated 90° to view down the axis containing the unique vertex; (e) The inner body and inner core proteins of phages PhiKZ (EMD-1415, EMD-1996) and T7 (EMD-5568) are shown in green inside their respective capsids. All viruses in Figure 2 are shown in scale (the scale bar is 1000Å).
Figure 3Symmetry mismatch between trimeric fiber and pentameric penton base of adenovirus. (a) Surface rendered view of 3D-dimensional reconstruction of human adenovirus 26 (EMD-8471). (b) Schematic model for the attachment of adenovirus trimeric fiber to the penton base. The fiber is drawn as a red triangle with extended stay-cables interacting asymmetrically with the pentameric penton base (in black). The schematic diagram is drawn as proposed by Hong Zhou and collaborators in [178]. Hydrophobic residues in the penton base located at the rim of the channel are shown as a blue circle.