Abstract

The Spumaretrovirinae, or foamy viruses (FVs) are complex retroviruses that infect many species of monkey and ape. Despite little sequence homology, FV and orthoretroviral Gag proteins perform equivalent functions, including genome packaging, virion assembly, trafficking and membrane targeting. However, there is a paucity of structural information for FVs and it is unclear how disparate FV and orthoretroviral Gag molecules share the same function. To probe the functional overlap of FV and orthoretroviral Gag we have determined the structure of a central region of Gag from the Prototype FV (PFV). The structure comprises two all α-helical domains NtDCEN and CtDCEN that although they have no sequence similarity, we show they share the same core fold as the N- (NtDCA) and C-terminal domains (CtDCA) of archetypal orthoretroviral capsid protein (CA). Moreover, structural comparisons with orthoretroviral CA align PFV NtDCEN and CtDCEN with NtDCA and CtDCA respectively. Further in vitro and functional virological assays reveal that residues making inter-domain NtDCEN—CtDCEN interactions are required for PFV capsid assembly and that intact capsid is required for PFV reverse transcription. These data provide the first information that relates the Gag proteins of Spuma and Orthoretrovirinae and suggests a common ancestor for both lineages containing an ancient CA fold.

Highlights

  • Spuma- or foamy viruses (FVs) are complex retroviruses that constitute the only members of the Spumaretrovirinae subfamily within the Retroviridae family [1]

  • Foamyviruses (FVs) or Spuma-retroviruses derive their name from the cytopathic effects they cause in cell culture

  • Infection in humans is benign and FVs have entered the human population through zoonosis from apes resulting in the emergence of Prototype FV (PFV)

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Summary

Introduction

Spuma- or foamy viruses (FVs) are complex retroviruses that constitute the only members of the Spumaretrovirinae subfamily within the Retroviridae family [1] They have been isolated from a variety of primate hosts [2,3,4,5] as well as from cats [6,7,8], cattle [9], horses [10] and sheep [11]. Dramatic effects are observed on the formation of morphologically intact cores, particle DNA content and infectivity. The absence of viral DNA genomes in released mutant virions (Fig 7) implies that this Gag rearrangement and capsid shell formation is a requirement for one or more steps in reverse transcription and may be analogous to maturation in orthoretroviruses

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