Abstract

BackgroundThe human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein (Env), a Type 1 transmembrane protein, assembles into a trimeric spike complex that mediates virus entry into host cells. The high potential energy of the metastable, unliganded Env trimer is maintained by multiple non-covalent contacts among the gp120 exterior and gp41 transmembrane Env subunits. Structural studies suggest that the gp41 transmembrane region forms a left-handed coiled coil that contributes to the Env trimer interprotomer contacts. Here we evaluate the contribution of the gp41 transmembrane region to the folding and stability of Env trimers.MethodsMultiple polar/charged amino acid residues, which hypothetically disrupt the stop-transfer signal, were introduced in the proposed lipid-interactive face of the transmembrane coiled coil, allowing release of soluble cleavage-negative Envs containing the modified transmembrane region (TMmod). We also examined effects of cleavage, the cytoplasmic tail and a C-terminal fibritin trimerization (FT) motif on oligomerization, antigenicity and functionality of soluble and membrane-bound Envs.ResultsThe introduction of polar/charged amino acids into the transmembrane region resulted in the secretion of soluble Envs from the cell. However, these TMmod Envs primarily formed dimers. By contrast, control cleavage-negative sgp140 Envs lacking the transmembrane region formed soluble trimers, dimers and monomers. TMmod and sgp140 trimers were stabilized by the addition of a C-terminal FT sequence, but still exhibited carbohydrate and antigenic signatures of a flexible ectodomain structure. On the other hand, detergent-solubilized cleaved and uncleaved Envs isolated from the membranes of expressing cells exhibited "tighter” ectodomain structures, based on carbohydrate modifications. These trimers were found to be unstable in detergent solutions, but could be stabilized by the addition of a C-terminal FT moiety. The C-terminal FT domain decreased Env cleavage and syncytium-forming ability by approximately three-fold; alteration of the FT trimerization interface restored Env cleavage and syncytium formation to near-wild-type levels.ConclusionThe modified transmembrane region was not conducive to trimerization of soluble Envs. However, for HIV-1 Env ectodomains that are minimally modified, membrane-anchored Envs exhibit the most native structures and can be stabilized by appropriately positioned FT domains.

Highlights

  • The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein (Env), a Type 1 transmembrane protein, assembles into a trimeric spike complex that mediates virus entry into host cells

  • When these residues in the HIV-1JR-FL Env(−)Δ712 glycoprotein were individually altered to alanine, the resulting glycoproteins were efficiently expressed in cells and, like the unmodified Env(−)Δ712 glycoprotein, were completely cell-associated

  • Because the HIV-1JR-FL Env is not recognized by these antibodies, we introduced the E168K + N188A (EKNA) changes into the TMmod10 Env(−)Δ712 and Env(−)Δ753 glycoproteins to restore the PG9 and PG16 epitopes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein (Env), a Type 1 transmembrane protein, assembles into a trimeric spike complex that mediates virus entry into host cells. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) entry into cells is mediated by the envelope glycoprotein (Env) spike on the viral membrane [1]. The unliganded Env spike on the HIV-1 membrane exists in a high-potential-energy state (State 1) [12,13,14]. Binding of gp120 to the initial target cell receptor, CD4, induces conformational changes in the metastable Env complex that lead to lower-energy intermediate states (States 2 and 3) along the entry pathway [13,14,15,16]. Transitions from the high potential energy state of the unliganded Env trimer drive fusion between the viral and cell membranes

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call