Abstract

The influenza A and B viruses are the primary cause of seasonal flu epidemics. Common to both viruses is the M2 protein, a homotetrameric transmembrane proton channel that acidifies the virion after endocytosis. Although influenza A M2 (AM2) and B M2 (BM2) are functional analogs, they have little sequence homology, except for a conserved HXXXW motif, which is responsible for proton selectivity and channel gating. Importantly, BM2 contains a second titratable histidine, His-27, in the tetrameric transmembrane domain that forms a reverse WXXXH motif with the gating tryptophan. To understand how His-27 affects the proton conduction property of BM2, we have used solid-state NMR to characterize the pH-dependent structure and dynamics of His-27. In cholesterol-containing lipid membranes mimicking the virus envelope, 15N NMR spectra show that the His-27 tetrad protonates with higher pKa values than His-19, indicating that the solvent-accessible His-27 facilitates proton conduction of the channel by increasing the proton dissociation rates of His-19. AM2 is inhibited by the amantadine class of antiviral drugs, whereas BM2 has no known inhibitors. We measured the N-terminal interhelical separation of the BM2 channel using fluorinated Phe-5. The interhelical 19F-19F distances show a bimodal distribution of a short distance of 7 Å and a long distance of 15-20 Å, indicating that the phenylene rings do not block small-molecule entry into the channel pore. These results give insights into the lack of amantadine inhibition of BM2 and reveal structural diversities in this family of viral proton channels.

Highlights

  • The influenza A and B viruses are the primary cause of seasonal flu epidemics

  • Influenza A M2 (AM2) and B M2 (BM2) are functional analogs, they have little sequence homology, except for a conserved HXXXW motif, which is responsible for proton selectivity and channel gating

  • Critical to the viral lifecycle is the M2 protein, a single-pass, membrane spanning, homo-tetrameric proton channel responsible for acidifying the virion after endocytosis; acidification of the viral interior initiates uncoating [2]. In both influenza A and B M2 proteins, an HXXXW motif is conserved in the TM domain, in which the His is responsible for proton selectivity and acid activation [3, 4], whereas the Trp ensures asymmetric proton conduction from the N terminus to the C terminus [5, 6]

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Summary

Introduction

The influenza A and B viruses are the primary cause of seasonal flu epidemics. Common to both viruses is the M2 protein, a homotetrameric transmembrane proton channel that acidifies the virion after endocytosis. Influenza A M2 (AM2) and B M2 (BM2) are functional analogs, they have little sequence homology, except for a conserved HXXXW motif, which is responsible for proton selectivity and channel gating. Critical to the viral lifecycle is the M2 protein, a single-pass, membrane spanning, homo-tetrameric proton channel responsible for acidifying the virion after endocytosis; acidification of the viral interior initiates uncoating [2] In both influenza A and B M2 proteins, an HXXXW motif is conserved in the TM domain, in which the His is responsible for proton selectivity and acid activation [3, 4], whereas the Trp ensures asymmetric proton conduction from the N terminus to the C terminus [5, 6]. The Ser-9, Ile-14, Leu-18, and Ala-22 chemical shifts are insensitive to pH, whereas His-27 shows pH-dependent changes of C␣ and C␤ chemical shifts

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