Abstract

Noroviruses are the major cause of non-bacterial acute gastroenteritis in humans and livestock worldwide, despite being physically among the simplest animal viruses. The icosahedral capsid encasing the norovirus RNA genome is made of 90 dimers of a single ca 60-kDa polypeptide chain, VP1, arranged with T = 3 icosahedral symmetry. Here we study the conformational dynamics of this main building block of the norovirus capsid. We use molecular modeling and all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of the VP1 dimer for two genogroups with 50% sequence identity. We focus on the two points of flexibility in VP1 known from the crystal structure of the genogroup I (GI, human) capsid and from subsequent cryo-electron microscopy work on the GII capsid (also human). First, with a homology model of the GIII (bovine) VP1 dimer subjected to simulated annealing then classical molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the N-terminal arm conformation seen in the GI crystal structure is also favored in GIII VP1 but depends on the protonation state of critical residues. Second, simulations of the GI dimer show that the VP1 spike domain will not keep the position found in the GII electron microscopy work. Our main finding is a consistent propensity of the VP1 dimer to assume prominently asymmetric conformations. In order to probe this result, we obtain new SAXS data on GI VP1 dimers. These data are not interpretable as a population of symmetric dimers, but readily modeled by a highly asymmetric dimer. We go on to discuss possible implications of spontaneously asymmetric conformations in the successive steps of norovirus capsid assembly. Our work brings new lights on the surprising conformational range encoded in the norovirus major capsid protein.

Highlights

  • Noroviruses are major causes of acute gastroenteritis worldwide [1]

  • We further explore the conformations and dynamics of the norovirus VP1 dimer by molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations and with additional SAXS data on the GI dimer

  • A homology model of NB2 (GIII.2) VP1 was built based on the Norwalk virus (GI.1, Fig 1B and 1C) capsid protein crystallographic structure (PDB: 1IHM)[3]

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Summary

Introduction

Noroviruses are major causes of acute gastroenteritis worldwide [1]. They are extremely resilient and biodisponible, explaining in part their high infectivity by the fecal-oral route. The norovirus virion’s major protein component comprises 180 copies of a single polypeptide chain (viral protein 1, or VP1) that together encase the ca 7500-base single-stranded RNA genome and a few copies of viral protein 2 (VP2). Upon production in the baculovirus system, VP1 self-assembles into empty virus-like particles (VLP) that are antigenically and structurally indistinguishable from infectious particles collected in infected individuals’ stools [2].

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