| Literature DB >> 29505618 |
Florian Douam1,2,3, Floriane Fusil1, Margot Enguehard2,4,5, Linda Dib6, Francesca Nadalin7, Loïc Schwaller8, Gabriela Hrebikova3, Jimmy Mancip1, Laurent Mailly9,10, Roland Montserret11, Qiang Ding3, Carine Maisse4, Emilie Carlot12, Ke Xu12, Els Verhoeyen1, Thomas F Baumert5,9,10, Alexander Ploss3, Alessandra Carbone7,13, François-Loïc Cosset1, Dimitri Lavillette1,2,4,12.
Abstract
Amino-acid coevolution can be referred to mutational compensatory patterns preserving the function of a protein. Viral envelope glycoproteins, which mediate entry of enveloped viruses into their host cells, are shaped by coevolution signals that confer to viruses the plasticity to evade neutralizing antibodies without altering viral entry mechanisms. The functions and structures of the two envelope glycoproteins of the Hepatitis C Virus (HCV), E1 and E2, are poorly described. Especially, how these two proteins mediate the HCV fusion process between the viral and the cell membrane remains elusive. Here, as a proof of concept, we aimed to take advantage of an original coevolution method recently developed to shed light on the HCV fusion mechanism. When first applied to the well-characterized Dengue Virus (DENV) envelope glycoproteins, coevolution analysis was able to predict important structural features and rearrangements of these viral protein complexes. When applied to HCV E1E2, computational coevolution analysis predicted that E1 and E2 refold interdependently during fusion through rearrangements of the E2 Back Layer (BL). Consistently, a soluble BL-derived polypeptide inhibited HCV infection of hepatoma cell lines, primary human hepatocytes and humanized liver mice. We showed that this polypeptide specifically inhibited HCV fusogenic rearrangements, hence supporting the critical role of this domain during HCV fusion. By combining coevolution analysis and in vitro assays, we also uncovered functionally-significant coevolving signals between E1 and E2 BL/Stem regions that govern HCV fusion, demonstrating the accuracy of our coevolution predictions. Altogether, our work shed light on important structural features of the HCV fusion mechanism and contributes to advance our functional understanding of this process. This study also provides an important proof of concept that coevolution can be employed to explore viral protein mediated-processes, and can guide the development of innovative translational strategies against challenging human-tropic viruses.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29505618 PMCID: PMC5854445 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Fig 6A dialog between E1 residues and the BL modulates virus entry and fusion.
(A) Representation of the gt2 fusion cluster 5 (orange; dotted circle and linked by a bold line) as a putative mediator of E2 BL rearrangements and fusogenic conformational changes. Putative movements of the E2 BL are indicated by dotted double arrows. Rotation angles of the E2core structure and black cross are indicated as in . (B) Regions of interest to study the role of the cluster 5 (orange) and design of the gt2 chimera. Three regions were defined as cluster 5 blocks. One is located on E1 (30 aa; Region 1) and two are located in E2 BLd (Region 2: E2 408–436, N terminal region; Region 3: E2 437–456, C terminal region). (C-D) A dialog between E1 and the BL domain regulates virus entry. Infectious titers of HCVpp (GFP i.u./ml, C) and HCVcc (FFU/ml, D) viral particles harboring J6 (black), 2b1 (white) and J6/2b1 E1E2 chimera. Swapped regions (1, 2 or 3) are represented by white (2b1) or black (J6) boxes inserted into J6 or 2b1 linear representations, respectively (bottom). Infectious titers were quantified 72h (HCVpp) or 4 days (HCVcc) post infection of Huh7.5. (mean ± SD; n = 4); *p<0.05.; ns non-significant. (E-F) A dialog between E1 and the BL domain regulates membrane fusion. Cell-cell fusion induced by the different E1E2 chimera (as described in ). HANA (Influenza Hemagglutinin-Neuraminidase) envelope glycoproteins were used as positive control. Data are presented as relative light unit (RLU) at pH5 (E) or as percentage of fusion (F) where pH7 RLU is considered as 100% fusion rate for each chimera (mean ± SD; n = 3); *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001 ns non-significant. For panel (F), statistical significances were determined for each experimental condition versus control condition (100%).