Abstract

Henipaviruses are newly emerged viruses within the Paramyxoviridae family. Their negative-strand RNA genome is packaged by the nucleoprotein (N) within α-helical nucleocapsid that recruits the polymerase complex made of the L protein and the phosphoprotein (P). To date structural data on Henipaviruses are scarce, and their N and P proteins have never been characterized so far. Using both computational and experimental approaches we herein show that Henipaviruses N and P proteins possess large intrinsically disordered regions. By combining several disorder prediction methods, we show that the N-terminal domain of P (PNT) and the C-terminal domain of N (NTAIL) are both mostly disordered, although they contain short order-prone segments. We then report the cloning, the bacterial expression, purification and characterization of Henipavirus PNT and NTAIL domains. By combining gel filtration, dynamic light scattering, circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance, we show that both NTAIL and PNT belong to the premolten globule sub-family within the class of intrinsically disordered proteins. This study is the first reported experimental characterization of Henipavirus P and N proteins. The evidence that their respective N-terminal and C-terminal domains are highly disordered under native conditions is expected to be invaluable for future structural studies by helping to delineate N and P protein domains amenable to crystallization. In addition, following previous hints establishing a relationship between structural disorder and protein interactivity, the present results suggest that Henipavirus PNT and NTAIL domains could be involved in manifold protein-protein interactions.

Highlights

  • Hendra virus (HeV), the first known member of the genus Henipavirus within the Paramyxoviridae family, emerged in 1994 as the causative agent of a sudden outbreak of acute respiratory disease in horses in Brisbane, Australia

  • With the only exception of the first 50 residues, which are predicted to be ordered, the P protein of both viruses possesses a spectacularly large N-terminal region of about 400 residues that is depleted in hydrophobic clusters, that is predicted to be disordered by most predictors and that possesses very few predicted secondary structure elements, a feature typifying protein regions with ‘‘no ordered regular structure’’ [39]

  • Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) studies of Henipavirus PNT and NTAIL In order to discriminate between these two latter hypotheses and to directly assess the actual conformation of Henipavirus PNT and NTAIL proteins, we studied them by 2D NMR spectroscopy

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Summary

Introduction

Hendra virus (HeV), the first known member of the genus Henipavirus within the Paramyxoviridae family, emerged in 1994 as the causative agent of a sudden outbreak of acute respiratory disease in horses in Brisbane, Australia. The genome of HeV and NiV shares the same overall organization of members of the Paramyxovirinae subfamily, a few distinctive properties, including their much larger size, led to the creation of the Henipavirus genus to accommodate these newly emerged zoonotic viruses [3]. This genus contains two virus species and a number of strains isolated from humans, bats, horses and pigs over a wide geographic area and during a period of 10 years. The susceptibility of humans, the wide host range and interspecies transmission and the absence of therapeutics agents led to the classification of HeV and NiV as biosecurity level 4 (BSL4) pathogens [4]

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