Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus Gag protein self-assembles into spherical particles, and recent reports suggest the formation of assembly intermediates during the process. To understand the nature of such assembly intermediates along with the mechanism of Gag assembly, we employed expression in Escherichia coli and an in vitro assembly reaction. When E. coli expression was performed at 37 degrees C, Gag predominantly assembled to a high order of multimer, apparently equivalent to the virus-like particles obtained following Gag expression in eukaryotic cells, through the formation of low orders of multimer characterized with a discreet sedimentation value of 60 S. Electron microscopy confirmed the presence of spherical particles in the E. coli cells. In contrast, expression at 30 degrees C resulted in the production of only the 60 S form of Gag multimer, and crescent-shaped structures or small patches with double electron-dense layers were accumulated, but no complete particles. In vitro assembly reactions using purified Gag protein, when performed at 37 degrees C, also produced the high order of Gag multimers with some 60 S multimers, whereas the 30 degrees C reaction produced only the 60 S multimers. However, when the 60 S multimers were cross-linked so as not to allow conformational changes, in vitro assembly reactions at 37 degrees C did not produce any higher order of multimers. ATP depletion did not halt Gag assembly in the E. coli cells, and the addition of GroEL-GroES to in vitro reactions did not facilitate Gag assembly, indicating that conformational changes rather than protein refolding by chaperonins, induced at 37 degrees C, were solely responsible for the Gag assembly observed here. We suggest that Gag assembles to a capsid through the formation of the 60 S multimer, possibly a key intermediate of the assembly process, accompanied with conformational changes in Gag.

Highlights

  • When E. coli expression was performed at 37 °C, Gag predominantly assembled to a high order of multimer, apparently equivalent to the virus-like particles obtained following Gag expression in eukaryotic cells, through the formation of low orders of multimer characterized with a discreet sedimentation value of 60 S

  • The major structural component of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV),1 Gag, is the sole protein required for viral particle budding, and expression of Gag protein alone in eukaryotic cells produces Gag virus-like particle (VLP), morphologically identical to the immature form of HIV particles [1,2,3]

  • Similar findings have been reported for other retroviral Gags [27, 28]. These data show that the assembly phenotypes of Gag produced by expression in E. coli as well as by in vitro reaction mimic the authentic Gag assembly observed in eukaryotic cells and suggest that the assembly reaction is driven by the intrinsic properties of Gag protein

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The major structural component of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV),1 Gag, is the sole protein required for viral particle budding, and expression of Gag protein alone in eukaryotic cells produces Gag virus-like particle (VLP), morphologically identical to the immature form of HIV particles [1,2,3]. We have shown previously, using purified Gag protein lacking the C-terminal p6 domain, that the in vitro assembly reaction is composed of two sequential steps: the formation of a 60 S complex, possibly an assembly intermediate, and complete assembly to 600 S, equivalent to the immature form of HIV capsids [26].

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.