Abstract

The p7 protein from the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a 63 amino acid long polypeptide that is essential for replication, and is involved in protein trafficking and proton transport. Therefore, p7 is a possible target for antivirals. The consensus model for the channel formed by p7 protein is a hexameric or heptameric oligomer of α-helical hairpin monomers, each having two transmembrane domains, TM1 and TM2, where the N-terminal TM1 would face the lumen of this channel. A reported high-throughput functional assay to search for p7 channel inhibitors is based on carboxyfluorescein (CF) release from liposomes after p7 addition. However, the rationale for the dual ability of p7 to serve as an ion or proton channel in the infected cell, and to permeabilize membranes to large molecules like CF is not clear. We have recreated both activities in vitro, examining the conformation present in these assays using infrared spectroscopy. Our results indicate that an α-helical form of p7, which can transport protons, is not able to elicit CF release. In contrast, membrane permeabilization to CF is observed when p7 contains a high percentage of β-structure, or when using a C-terminal fragment of p7, encompassing TM2. We propose that the reported inhibitory effect of some small compounds, e.g., rimantadine, on both CF release and proton transport can be explained via binding to the membrane-inserted C-terminal half of p7, increasing its rigidity, in a similar way to the influenza A M2-rimantadine interaction.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has chronically infected about 170 million people worldwide and no prophylactic or therapeutic vaccine is available

  • Oligomers formed by p7 show cation-selective channel activity [4,5,6] which is blocked in some cases by amantadine, rimantadine, hexamethylene amiloride (HMA) and long-alkyl-chain imino sugar derivatives [4,5,6,7]

  • Purity of synthetic and recombinant p7 protein Dye release assays have been previously performed with tagged p7 protein, either with FLAG [32,33] or flu-antigen [25]

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has chronically infected about 170 million people worldwide and no prophylactic or therapeutic vaccine is available. Two very different CD spectra (SRCD), one consistent with an a-helical form, and another that was not assigned to any particular structure, both showing some channel activity, were obtained when p7 protein was reconstituted in membranes with varying PC:PE ratios [23].

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