Affiliation:
1. Department
of PathologyLaboratory Medicine, University
of Texas at Houston Medical School, Houston, Texas
77030
2. Myles H. Thaler Center for
AIDS and Human Retrovirus Research, Department of
Microbiology
3. Department of Microbiology
and Immunology
4. Lineberger Comprehensive
Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
5. Department of Internal
Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
Virginia 22908
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Rhesus
monkey rhadinovirus (RRV) exhibits high levels of sequence homology to
human gammaherpesviruses, such as Kaposi's sarcoma-associated
herpesvirus, and grows to high titers in cell cultures, making it a
good model system for studying gammaherpesvirus capsid structure and
assembly. We have purified RRV A, B, and C capsids, thus for the first
time allowing direct structure comparisons by electron cryomicroscopy
and three-dimensional reconstruction. The results show that the shells
of these capsids are identical and are each composed of 12 pentons, 150
hexons, and 320 triplexes. Structural differences were apparent inside
the shells and through the penton channels. The A capsid is empty, and
its penton channels are open. The B capsid contains a scaffolding core,
and its penton channels are closed. The C capsid contains a DNA genome,
which is closely packaged into regularly spaced density shells (25Å
apart), and its penton channels are open. The different
statuses of the penton channels suggest a functional role of the
channels during capsid maturation, and the overall structural
similarities of RRV capsids to alphaherpesvirus capsids suggest a
common assembly and maturation pathway. The RRV A capsid reconstruction
at a 15-Å resolution, the best achieved for gammaherpesvirus
particles, reveals overall structural similarities to alpha- and
betaherpesvirus capsids. However, the outer regions of the capsid,
including densities attributed to the Ta triplex and the small
capsomer-interacting protein (SCIP or ORF65), exhibit prominent
differences from their structural counterparts in alphaherpesviruses.
This structural disparity suggests that SCIP and the triplex, together
with tegument and envelope proteins, confer structural and potentially
functional specificities to alpha-, beta-, and
gammaherpesviruses.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
22 articles.
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