Abstract

BackgroundThe virion secretion mechanism of human hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains to be investigated. In our current study, we characterized a reverse transcriptase mutant, which changed from the YMDD motif to YMHA. We noted that this mutant YMHA secreted no virions in the medium. Because of the overlapping open reading frame (ORF) between the polymerase and the envelope genes, the lack of virion secretion is likely due to corresponding concurrent mutations in a small loop of the envelope protein (HBsAg, HBV surface antigen). In literature, small loop mutations are thought to affect virion secretion of hepatitis delta virus (HDV), but not HBV.MethodsHere, we revisited the relationship between the small loop and virion secretion by site-directed mutagenesis and native agarose gel electrophoresis.ResultsA proline substitution at residue 196 or 198 in the small loop blocked both HBV genome-containing and genome-free virion secretion, but not the secretion of 22-nm HBsAg subviral particles. Surprisingly, a leucine substitution at residue 196 enhanced genome-containing virion secretion. It is also intriguing that a proline-197, sandwiched by residue 196 and 198, exhibited no apparent defect in secreted virions, with or without containing an HBV genome. By complementation assay, we demonstrated that the wild type small envelope protein alone is sufficient to rescue the virion secretion defect of a small loop mutant M198P.ConclusionsThe effect of the small loop mutation of HBV small envelope protein on virion secretion is position-dependent. It warrants further investigation how the small loop of HBsAg plays a subtle role in HBV morphogenesis and secretion of virions with or without containing an HBV genome.

Highlights

  • The virion secretion mechanism of human hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains to be investigated

  • No virion secretion of polymerase mutant YMHA A predicted topology of HBV envelope protein (HBV surface antigen, HBsAg) on the membrane is illustrated in Fig. 1A [13, 14]

  • There are two cytosolic loops designated as Large cytosolic loop I (CYL-I) and Small cytosolic loop II (CYL-II) [15]

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Summary

Introduction

The virion secretion mechanism of human hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains to be investigated. We characterized a reverse transcriptase mutant, which changed from the YMDD motif to YMHA. We noted that this mutant YMHA secreted no virions in the medium. Because of the overlapping open reading frame (ORF) between the polymerase and the envelope genes, the lack of virion secretion is likely due to corresponding concurrent mutations in a small loop of the envelope protein (HBsAg, HBV surface antigen). Small loop mutations are thought to affect virion secretion of hepatitis delta virus (HDV), but not HBV. In the cell culture transfection system, a number of viral

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