Abstract

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a significant health burden and leading cause of virus-induced cancers. HPV is epitheliotropic and its replication is tightly associated with terminal keratinocyte differentiation making production and purification of high titer virus preparations for research problematic, therefore alternative HPV production methods have been developed for virological and structural studies. In this study we use HPV16 quasivirus, composed of HPV16 L1/L2 capsid proteins with a packaged cottontail rabbit papillomavirus genome. We have achieved the first high resolution, 3.1 Å, structure of HPV16 by using a local subvolume refinement approach. The high resolution enabled us to build L1 unambiguously and identify L2 protein strands. The L2 density is incorporated adjacent to conserved L1 residues on the interior of the capsid. Further interpretation with our own software for Icosahedral Subvolume Extraction and Correlated Classification revealed flexibility, on the whole-particle level through diameter analysis and local movement with inter-capsomer analysis. Inter-capsomer expansion or contraction, governed by the connecting arms, showed no bias in the magnitude or direction of capsomer movement. We propose that papillomavirus capsids are dynamic and capsomers move as rigid bodies connected by flexible linkers. The resulting virus structure will provide a framework for continuing biochemical, genetic and biophysical research for papillomaviruses. Furthermore, our approach has allowed insight into the resolution barrier that has previously been a limitation in papillomavirus structural studies.

Highlights

  • Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a significant health burden and leading cause of virus-induced cancers

  • HPV is epitheliotropic and its replication is tightly associated with terminal keratinocyte differentiation making production and purification of high-titer virus preparations for research problematic

  • Capsid protein only virus-like particles (VLPs) can be composed of the major structural protein (L1) alone, or of the major and minor capsid proteins (L1/L2) and are not infectious since they are devoid of viral ­genomes[11,12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a significant health burden and leading cause of virus-induced cancers. HPV is epitheliotropic and its replication is tightly associated with terminal keratinocyte differentiation making production and purification of high titer virus preparations for research problematic, alternative HPV production methods have been developed for virological and structural studies. In this study we use HPV16 quasivirus, composed of HPV16 L1/L2 capsid proteins with a packaged cottontail rabbit papillomavirus genome. Quasivirus is comprised of both structural proteins (L1/L2), but packaged with a cottontail rabbit papillomavirus genome (CRPV) to assemble a structurally complete L1/L2 capsid that is ­infectious[16]. All these different HPV VLPs preserve the main attributes of the native capsid structure and have. The asymmetric unit is comprised of six L1s, five of which make up a single hexavalent capsomer and one L1 that contributes to a pentavalent capsomer (Fig. 1A,B)

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