research papers
Structure of the Triatoma virus capsid
aLaboratoire de Virologie Moléculaire et Structurale, CNRS, 1 Avenue de la Terrasse, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette CEDEX, France, bFundación Biofísica Bizkaia, Barrio Sarriena S/N, 48940 Leioa, Bizkaia (FBB), Spain, cUnidad de Biofísica (UBF, CSIC, UPV/EHU), PO Box 644, 48080 Bilbao, Spain, dDepartamento de Biología, Bioquímica y Farmacia, U.N.S., San Juan 670, (8000) Bahía Blanca, Argentina, eDepartamento de Física, Grupo de Biofísica, U.N.S., Avenida Alem 1253, (8000) Bahía Blanca, Argentina, and fCentro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores (CEPAVE-CCT, La Plata, CONICET-UNLP), Calle 2 No. 584, (1900) La Plata, Argentina
*Correspondence e-mail: diego.guerin@ehu.es, rey@pasteur.fr
The members of the Dicistroviridae family are non-enveloped positive-sense single-stranded RNA (+ssRNA) viruses pathogenic to beneficial arthropods as well as insect pests of medical importance. Triatoma virus (TrV), a member of this family, infects several species of triatomine insects (popularly named kissing bugs), which are vectors for human trypanosomiasis, more commonly known as Chagas disease. The potential use of dicistroviruses as biological control agents has drawn considerable attention in the past decade, and several viruses of this family have been identified, with their targets covering honey bees, aphids and field crickets, among others. Here, the of the TrV capsid at 2.5 Å resolution is reported, showing that as expected it is very similar to that of Cricket paralysis virus (CrPV). Nevertheless, a number of distinguishing structural features support the introduction of a new genus (Triatovirus; type species TrV) under the Dicistroviridae family. The most striking differences are the absence of icosahedrally ordered VP4 within the infectious particle and the presence of prominent projections that surround the fivefold axis. Furthermore, the structure identifies a second putative autoproteolytic DDF motif in protein VP3, in addition to the conserved one in VP1 which is believed to be responsible for VP0 cleavage during capsid maturation. The potential meaning of these new findings is discussed.
Keywords: Triatoma virus; TrV; Cripavirus; Dicistroviridae; virus structure; X-ray crystallography.
PDB reference: TrV, 3nap
1. Introduction
Triatoma virus (TrV) is a pathogen of Triatoma infestans and other related bloodsucking insects (also called `kissing bugs') that are vectors of Chagas disease. This disease is a major health problem in Latin America, where it is endemic and affects about eight million people, 30–40% of whom develop cardiomyopathy and/or digestive megasyndromes (Rassi et al., 2010). The aetiological agent of Chagas disease is the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which infects the insect vector, which in turn infects vertebrate hosts during blood meals. Increasing human population movements have resulted in Chagas disease also becoming an emerging health problem outside the countries in which it is endemic. Efficient vector-control programs based on spraying chemical insecticides are important to reduce insect populations in endemic areas. In an effort to identify entomopathogens as biological weapons against the vector, TrV was isolated from T. infestans (Muscio et al., 1987), the main species transmitting Chagas disease in the southern countries of Latin America (Zeledón & Rabinovich, 1981).
Biological control of insect pests is gaining importance in efforts to reduce the use of chemical pesticides and to reduce their residues in the environment, and also to overcome the development of pesticide resistance (Sonoda et al., 2009; Lardeux et al., 2010). Two different approaches are used for the biological regulation of pest populations: the large-scale release of genetically modified individuals and the release into the environment of natural enemies such as bacteria, fungi or viruses. Insect crop plagues can be dealt with by intervening directly in plantation areas, where the targets can easily be reached. In contrast, insect vectors that transmit human diseases are more difficult to reach because they inhabit wide regions covering human dwellings, both in urban and in rural or sylvatic areas. In addition to Chagas disease, tropical diseases such as malaria, dengue fever, African sleeping sickness and leishmaniasis constitute major challenges for the development of efficient biological control strategies. In the case of dengue virus (DV), which is transmitted by the mosquitoes Aedes aegypti and A. albopictus (Harris et al., 2011), several potential control methods have been designed to either reduce the overall mosquito-vector population or to replace it with genetically modified populations that are unable to transmit the virus. One population-reduction strategy involved the use of natural or genetically engineered densoviruses that are pathogenic to A. aegypti mosquitoes (Carlson et al., 2000). Similarly, different strains of the maternally inherited bacterium Wolbachia (a member of the Rickettsiales order) have been used to control A. albopictus mosquitoes (Blagrove et al., 2012; Pan et al., 2012) as well as the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae (Jin et al., 2009). Viruses that have been used to control pests in agriculture and forestry include members of the Baculoviridae family, which are large DNA viruses (Szewczyk et al., 2006), and also small insect RNA viruses (Harrap et al., 1966; Moore, 1991).
TrV belongs to the Dicistroviridae family of small RNA viruses. A number of viruses of this family are pathogens of agricultural insect plagues such as grasshoppers (Homalodisca coagulata), olive fruit flies (Dacus oleae) and the red fire ant (Solenopsis invicta). Like TrV, these viruses have been considered as potential biopesticides (Hunnicutt et al., 2006; Czibener et al., 2000; Manousis & Moore, 1987; Bonning & Miller, 2010; Gordon & Waterhouse, 2006). The viruses in the Dicistroviridae family were previously known as `picorna-like viruses' because of their similarity to the members of the Picornaviridae family of viruses that infect humans and other mammals. Both families are characterized by an icosahedral capsid of pseudo-triangulation number P = 3 and the absence of a lipidic envelope. The genome is a single-stranded positive-sense RNA (psRNA) molecule, which in the case of the Dicistroviridae is a bicistronic The 5′ open reading frame (ORF) codes for a polyprotein precursor of the nonstructural proteins, including the viral polymerase, protease and helicase. The 3′ ORF codes for polyprotein P1, which is the precursor of the capsid proteins VP1, VP2, VP3 and VP4. The P1 polyprotein precursor contains these proteins in the order N-terminus–VP2–VP0–VP1–C-terminus, with a strictly conserved glutamine residue marking the C-termini of VP2 and VP0, where it signals P1 cleavage, presumably by the viral 3Cpro protease as in picornaviruses. VP0 includes the mature proteins in the order N-terminus–VP4–VP3–C-terminus and appears to undergo cleavage into its component proteins via a capsid autoproteolytic mechanism upon RNA encapsidation (Agirre et al., 2011). This process involves a conserved DDF motif present in VP1, as suggested for Cricket paralysis virus (CrPV; Tate et al., 1999), the type species of the Cripavirus genus within the Dicistroviridae family. The of the CrPV capsid allowed a detailed comparison with the structures of the picornaviruses, revealing specific differences, such as strand-swapping of the corresponding N-terminal tails of VP2 about the icosahedral twofold axes, which are specific to dicistroviruses (Tate et al., 1999). In an effort to similarly characterize the TrV particle, we have crystallized and determined the three-dimensional structure of the virion at 2.5 Å resolution. We provide a detailed analysis of the structure in comparison to that of the CrPV capsid, showing that TrV differs substantially in surface features, in the absence of an ordered VP4 molecule in the capsid interior and in the presence in VP3 of a structurally conserved catalytic motif involving the same DDF sequence as in VP1. We also discuss putative regions of interaction with the host during entry, opening the way to functional studies to better understand the biology of TrV.
2. Materials and methods
2.1. TrV purification, crystallization and structure solution and refinement
TrV was purified from infected T. infestans bugs as described in a previous report (Rozas-Dennis et al., 2004). Crystals were obtained under many different conditions and after optimization the best crystals were either rhombohedral (type I) or orthorhombic (type II) (Rozas-Dennis et al., 2004). A stabilization process was carried out in order to improve vitrification for cryocooling: 5 µl of a stabilizing solution composed of 20%(w/v) PEG 2000 MME, 500 mM KCl, 100 mM Tris pH 8.5, 30%(v/v) glycerol was pipetted over the drop containing the crystals. This process was repeated three times, leaving a 2 min lapse between transfers, so that the crystals were subjected to increasing concentrations of cryoprotectant. The cryocooled crystals diffracted well and were highly resistant to radiation damage. Data from the two crystal forms were collected on beamline ID14-1 at the ESRF, Grenoble, France. An initial model for the TrV structure was obtained by with the AMoRe program (Navaza, 2001) using data to 4 Å resolution collected from the rhombohedral crystal form. The search model was a full capsid of 60 protomers of a polyalanine version of CrPV VP1, VP2, VP3 and VP4 (PDB entry 1b35; Tate et al., 1999). The three best solutions had an R factor of 45% and a of 30% and were related by the crystallographic threefold symmetry axis, indicating that the virus lies on this axis with one third of the capsid in the This confirms the analysis of the self-rotation function as described in Rozas-Dennis et al. (2004). The next best solution had an R factor of 49% and a of 21%. Phasing was performed with the CCP4 suite of programs (Winn et al., 2011). One third of the polyalanine CrPV capsid corresponding to the best solution was used for initial phasing to 7 Å resolution. Phases were improved and extended to 3.2 Å resolution by 20-fold density averaging and solvent flattening with DM in 100 steps (Cowtan, 1994). The resulting map was readily interpretable, with many side chains clearly visible, and a protomer of TrV VP1, VP2 and VP3 was built. The model of 20 protomers was refined to 3.2 Å resolution with CNS using NCS constraints (Brünger et al., 1998). The test set was selected in thin shells to avoid correlation between Rfree and Rcryst as much as possible. The matrices relating the 19 implicit protomers to the explicit protomer were refined at this stage and a final round of of the rhombohedral form was performed. One half of the resulting TrV capsid was used as a search model for with the data collected from the orthorhombic form (see Table 1), as the self-rotation function indicated that in this form the virus lies on the crystallographic twofold symmetry axis. There was a single unambiguous solution that was further refined with NCS constraints to produce the final structure of Triatoma virus capsid at 2.5 Å resolution (see Table 1). 1% of reflections were selected in thin shells for the test set. The final crystallographic and free R factors of 17.12 and 17.32%, respectively, indicate that the final Rfree is biased (Fabiola et al., 2006).
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2.2. Homology modelling
A theoretical atomic model of VP4 from TrV was generated using the MODELLER software (Sali & Blundell, 1993; Eswar et al., 2006). In order to provide all of the neighbouring contacts as a context for modelling, we employed template atomic coordinates of five copies of VP4 from a CrPV penton (previously superimposed on its TrV counterpart) combined with the coordinates of a VP1–VP3 TrV penton. Symmetry mates for the atomic model of the CrPV protomer (PDB entry 1b35; Tate et al., 1999) and its TrV equivalent (PDB entry 3nap) were generated with O (Jones et al., 1991) using the first five VIPER matrices for each structure (Carrillo-Tripp et al., 2009), which contain the required transformations to build a penton; after joining all of the resulting structures, they were superimposed using LSQMAN and their chain IDs were normalized using MOLEMAN2 (Kleywegt & Jones, 1994). The alignment supplied to MODELLER was calculated using T-Coffee running with default parameters (Notredame et al., 2000).
2.3. Sequence alignment
A comparative study was performed by aligning the amino-acid sequences of the three major coat proteins from the following dicistroviruses: TrV, HiPV, PSIV, BQCV, CrPV and DCV. The criterion employed for the selection of the viruses was based on the availability of experimental data delimiting the N-termini of the coat proteins, although the members of the proposed Aparavirus genus were excluded for being excessively divergent in terms of sequence similarity. The alignment was performed using the Expresso mode of the T-Coffee package (Di Tommaso et al., 2011; Armougom et al., 2006; O'Sullivan et al., 2004; Poirot et al., 2004; Notredame et al., 2000), which incorporates structural information into multiple sequence alignments. The sequence order was kept as input. Secondary-structure assignment was performed with DSSP (Kabsch & Sander, 1983) using chains A, B and C (VP1, VP2 and VP3, respectively) from the atomic model of TrV as input and it was overlaid on top of the alignment using the ESPript software (Gouet et al., 1999). For VP4, these calculations were based on the theoretical model.
2.4. Close-range salt-bridge analysis
For this study, the reference protomer and all of its symmetry-related equivalents within a distance of 50 Å were analyzed. Symmetry mates were generated with O (Jones et al., 1991) and edited with MOLEMAN2 (Kleywegt & Jones, 1994). Salt bridges were then calculated using the WHAT IF software (Vriend, 1990). All interactions with a distance greater than 4 Å were discarded (Kumar & Nussinov, 2002).
2.5. Insect inoculation and infectivity test of crystallized TrV virions
All triatomines were immobilized using crossed needles over an expanded polystyrene surface configured to effectively restrict the movement of the insects without injuring them. Prior to inoculation of the liquid, the target surface was rinsed with ethanol in order to prevent bacterial infection. Each perforation was made in a side-most part of the insect to avoid damaging internal organs. All inoculations were performed using sterile 20 µl Hamilton 701-NA syringes. After injecting the liquid, the perforation was immediately sealed using molten paraffin wax. All insects were successfully checked for the absence of any mechanical damage caused by the needle.
Type II crystals were harvested from the growing drop with a CryoLoop, rinsed once for a few seconds in a 5 µl drop of precipitant solution (consisting of 6% PEG 8000, 5% 2-propanol, 500 mM NaCl, 100 mM sodium citrate pH 5.6) and then dissolved in a volume of NMT buffer to reach a final virion concentration of 2.7 mg ml−1 (the protein content was determined using a BCA assay kit; Pierce). This initial virus solution was diluted 1:3 in NMT buffer and 3 µl aliquots were inoculated into the haemocoel of each of the tested insects (two groups of ten adult T. infestans insects each). A double-control test (composed of five adult T. infestans insects each) was carried out using 3 µl of NMT buffer on one side and 3 µl of sterile saline solution on the other side as inoculums. After inoculation, all tested insects were examined every 18 h for the first 2 d and daily thereafter to detect symptoms of infection and/or death.
3. Results and discussion
3.1. The TrV capsid
The virion was crystallized in two crystal forms, rhombohedral and orthorhombic, which diffracted to 3.2 and 2.5 Å resolution, respectively, as reported previously (Rozas-Dennis et al., 2004). The structure was determined by (see §2) and the initial interpretable electron-density map was improved by real-space averaging using a combination of both crystal forms. The final model was traced and refined to 2.5 Å resolution against the diffraction data from the orthorhombic crystals (Table 1). The final refined model accounts for the polypeptide chain of three of the four expected proteins in the capsid, without the small protein VP4 (5.5 kDa). Also, in the final model VP1 (271 amino acids) lacks seven C-terminal residues, VP2 (255 amino acids) lacks eight N-terminal residues, and VP3 (285 amino acids) lacks nine C-terminal residues which are disordered in the capsid. In enteroviruses and in CrPV, the residues are numbered from 1001, 2001, 3001 and 4001 for VP1, VP2, VP3 and VP4, respectively, and we also follow this convention in this manuscript. The electron density was interpreted according to the published amino-acid sequence translated from the deposited genomic nucleotide sequence (GenBank accession No. AF178440; Czibener et al., 2000), with a minor discrepancy in VP3 residue 3054, which corresponds to valine in the sequence but displays an electron density that is more compatible with methionine. Taking into account that this residue is conserved as methionine in all of the other dicistroviruses that we have analyzed, this difference probably arises from an error in the original sequencing (Czibener et al., 2000). Overall, the TrV capsid displays icosahedral symmetry with pseudo-triangulation number P = 3 (Fig. 1), as expected. It is built from 60 protomers made up of proteins VP1, VP2 and VP3. VP1 is located around the fivefold axes, and VP2 and VP3 alternate around the threefold icosahedral axes (Figs. 2 and 3). The three capsid proteins display the standard core domain folded as an eight-stranded antiparallel jelly-roll β-barrel. This β-barrel, which is composed of opposing β-sheets BIDG and CHEF (coloured red and yellow, respectively, in Figs. 3, 5 and 6), is such that the β-sheets alternate around the fivefold axes (VP1) and around the quasi-sixfold axes (VP2 and VP3). This feature, highlighted in Fig. 3, is observed in all quasi-equivalent RNA virus particles that are based on a jelly-roll motif. In addition, each β-barrel has N-terminal and C-terminal arms that intertwine to make internal and features, as well as intra-protomer and inter-protomer interactions.
As previously described in the comparison between the capsids of CrPV and the enteroviruses (Tate et al., 1999), there is neither a canyon nor a pocket in the TrV particle (Supplementary Fig. S11). In contrast to CrPV, TrV displays relatively pronounced projections at the of the particle surrounding the fivefold axes (Figs. 1 and 2a). The projections are composed of loops and β-sheets from VP1 and VP3 (highlighted in blue and cyan, respectively, in Figs. 3, 5 and 6) in regions in which there are specific insertions in TrV (M1–M4 in Figs. 1, 2 and 5). These surface features, which were also apparent in our previous low-resolution cryo-EM reconstructions (Agirre et al., 2013; Estrozi et al., 2008), result in a slightly larger maximum diameter (33.51 versus 32.92 nm) in the TrV particle despite it having about 4% fewer residues. At the fivefold axis there is a channel of roughly 10 Å in diameter with residues 1128 (Gln), 1166 (Val) and 1167 (Thr) lining its inner wall. The channel is blocked by a density feature that can be interpreted as a metal ion coordinated by the side chain of Gln3014 and its fivefold counterparts. An uninterpreted peanut-shaped density feature is also found below the metal. These features were all observed in a map calculated from data in the resolution range 8–2.5 Å and inspected at 2σ in order to discard low-resolution artifacts accumulated on the symmetry axis.
Both VP2 and VP3 have extended N-terminal tails (called N-tails below), which are very similar to those observed in the corresponding CrPV proteins (Fig. 3). In particular, the VP2 N-tail exchanges with its twofold symmetry-related neighbours, resulting in strand swapping (Bennett et al., 1995), which was one of the characteristic features of dicistroviruses as concluded from the comparison of the CrPV particle with those of the picornaviruses (Tate et al., 1999). This organization allows VP2 to interact with distant VP1 and VP3 copies from other protomers (Table 2) and further stabilizes the VP2 dimer. The strand-swapping mechanism has also been observed in several plant viruses (Qu et al., 2000) and oligomeric proteins (Schlunegger et al., 1997; Bennett et al., 1994), but not in the picornaviruses, as mentioned above. The conservation of the amino acids involved in the strand swap across the Dicistroviridae family predicts that this feature is present across the whole virus family, as suggested previously (Liljas et al., 2002).
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The VP3 N-tails intertwine around the fivefold axes of the particle, just like the CrPV counterparts, creating a β-cylinder of 6 Å in diameter right beneath the pore present between five copies of VP1 (Fig. 2b). Two salt bridges link each VP3 N-tail with a VP2 copy from another protomer. It is notable that the presence of multiple interprotomer salt bridges contrasts with the single salt bridge occurring within a protomer (Table 2); this may have implications in virus assembly and uncoating.
3.2. VP4 is disordered within the TrV capsid
In picornaviruses, the smallest structural protein VP4 (of about 5–7 kDa) plays an important role during cell entry (Hewat et al., 2002; Schneemann et al., 1992). Although the N-terminal end of VP4 is disordered in several picornaviruses (Hadfield et al., 1997; Kim et al., 1989; Zhao et al., 1996), it is found to be well structured at the capsid interior in most of them (Hogle et al., 1985; Verdaguer et al., 2000). In particular, in the human rhinovirus VP4 adopts a β-cylinder conformation around the fivefold axis (Hadfield et al., 1997). In the CrPV VP4 displays a compact pentameric α-annulus centred on the fivefold axis (Tate et al., 1999). A number of conformational differences between VP4 in CrPV with respect to its picornavirus counterpart suggest that VP4 in the insect viruses may not play the same role as it does in picornaviruses (Rossmann & Tao, 1999; Tate et al., 1999). VP4 is known to be present in infectious TrV particles (Agirre et al., 2011), but its location within the capsid has remained elusive not only by X-ray crystallography but also by two different cryo-EM three-dimensional reconstruction methodologies (Agirre et al., 2013; Estrozi et al., 2008). These data suggest that VP4 is present in TrV but is not icosahedrally ordered.
To confirm that the virus particles in the crystals are still infectious, we performed an infectivity test with a solution of redissolved TrV crystals. All ten insects inoculated with the solution from dissolved crystals died in 18 h, while only two insects out of the ten in the uninfected control set died after 15 d (data not shown), confirming that the crystallization process does not affect the infectivity of the virus particles.
Homology modelling of TrV VP4 using the CrPV VP4 pentamer formed about the icosahedral fivefold axis as a template (see §2) resulted, as expected, in a structure displaying the main features of the α-annulus adopted by the template (Fig. 4). Analysis of this model, after superposition of the TrV and CrPV pentamers, revealed that the TrV VP4 ring displays an electrostatic charge distribution that is complementary to that of the surrounding capsid when placed at the location indicated by the CrPV structure. This outcome allows us to hypothesize that, despite the low sequence identity (19.2% calculated from the alignment supplied as input to MODELLER), TrV VP4 might indeed adopt a similar structure to that of CrPV VP4. A detailed analysis of the CrPV atomic contacts along with their calculated binding and solvation energies was conducted using precalculated data available from ViperDB (Carrillo-Tripp et al., 2009) and revealed that amino acids 4009 (Glu) and 3008 (Lys) make five interprotomer salt bridges between the VP4 α-annulus and the capsid interior. While it only accounts for 10% of the total calculated solvation energy for the interface between VP4 and the rest of the capsid, this salt bridge remains the only specific interaction, with the other interactions being of hydrophobic nature. However, the residues that participate in the salt bridge are not conserved in TrV (residues annotated in orange in Fig. 5) and the absence of this interaction could result in disorder or even the dissociation of VP4 from the internal TrV capsid surface. We note also that the opposite face of the modeled α-annulus, which would be facing the genomic RNA, has a uniform basic surface electrostatic potential (data not shown). TrV VP4 might therefore bind more strongly to the negatively charged RNA and these interactions could play a role in displacing it from its initial location in an immature capsid, where it is derived by autocleavage of a VP0 precursor. Amino-acid sequence comparisons (Supplementary Fig. S3) suggest that a of the dicistroviruses, including Plautia stali intestine virus (PSIV), Himetobi P virus (HiPV) and Black queen cell virus (BQCV), might also have a disordered VP4 in their capsid, since they also lack the residues that make a salt bridge in CrPV. These viruses have been proposed along with TrV to be part of the genus tentatively named Triatovirus (Agirre et al., 2011).
3.3. A second DDF proteolytic motif in the TrV capsid
As introduced above, in the case of CrPV the amino-acid triad DDF (amino acids 1241–1243), which is located after strand I of the VP1 jelly roll, has been proposed to be responsible for the cleavage of VP0 into VP4 and VP3 upon capsid assembly (Tate et al., 1999). The side chain of the first aspartic acid in the motif points towards the gap between VP4 and VP3 from an adjacent fivefold-related protomer, suggesting that this cleavage step can only take place after at least a penton has been formed during assembly of the virion.
In TrV, the DDF triad (Fig. 2; amino acids 1223–1225) occupies exactly the same location, with main-chain and side-chain conformations exactly matching those observed in the CrPV capsid. The VP3 N-terminus, which is derived from the cleavage of VP0 into VP4 and VP3, also superimposes on its counterpart in CrPV. Thus, despite the absence of ordered density for VP4, the organization of the precursor VP0 within the capsid is very likely to be the same as in CrPV. The observation that naturally occurring empty TrV capsids contain unprocessed VP0 (Agirre et al., 2011) suggests that capsid autocleavage requires RNA encapsidation, in addition to having the catalytic residue in the vicinity of the VP0 scissile bond. The VP1 DDF motif is highly conserved, being present in nearly all Dicistroviridae members, highlighting its essential role within this virus family (Liljas et al., 2002). We note that in both CrPV and TrV VP1 the DDF motif is in a segment connecting the end of strand I of the jelly roll to a β-strand immediately downstream (termed βx4 in Fig. 5). This second strand makes an antiparallel interaction with a second β-strand (βx3) that precedes strand D on the same BIDG sheet of the jelly roll. This results in the DDF motif being located in a corner between the BIDG and the βx3βx4 sheets in a bend of about 90° since these two β-sheets are nearly orthogonal to each other, as illustrated in Fig. 6.
Intriguingly, a second DDF motif (3254–3256) is present in VP3 at the same location in the structure at the corner between the BIDG sheet and the βx1βx2 sheet, which is equivalent to the βx3βx4 sheet in VP1 (Fig. 6; see also Fig. 5, in which these β-sheets are highlighted in green). This motif is also conserved (Supplementary Fig. 3) in Black queen cell virus (BQCV), Himetobi P virus (HiPV) and Plautia stali intestine virus (PSIV), but is not found in CrPV or in Drosophila C virus (DCV), which is the closest neighbour to CrPV in the current Dicistroviridae phylogenetic tree (Fig. 7). Although the motif is not conserved in CrPV, the second aspartic acid in the sequence, Asp3243, is conserved and has the same orientation in the structure, with the side chain accepting a hydrogen bond from the main-chain amide of a conserved glycine residue between strands βx1 and D in VP3 and between strands βx3 and D in VP1. In the case of TrV, the side chain of Asp3255 (the second aspartic acid in the motif) also accepts a hydrogen bond from the main-chain amide of residue 3040 in the N-tail of the same VP3 molecule. This suggests that the second aspartic acid of the DDF motif is conserved because it plays a structural role and is not likely to have a catalytic role, leaving the first aspartic acid as the likely candidate. In contrast to the VP1 DDF motifs, in which the putative catalytic aspartic acid points to the N-terminus of VP3, in TrV VP3 this residue points towards the polypeptide segment spanning amino acids 1032–1035 in the VP1 N-tail. This segment is not cleaved, although it is plausible that an RNA rearrangement prior to exit may activate cleavage at this location. If this were the case, it would mean that TrV and CrPV have a different mechanism for RNA release, since the proline residue present in CrPV VP3 at the position of the catalytic aspartic acid would not be functional. The striking similarity between VP1 and VP3 in the region of the DDF motif may be a remnant of the particular evolutionary path of P = 3 viruses, which is postulated to have taken place via successive gene duplications from an ancestral precursor displaying T = 3 symmetry (Liljas et al., 2002). However, it is intriguing that the motif is conserved between VP1 and VP3, which share only about 12% sequence identity. In this respect, it is noteworthy that when comparing TrV VP1 with the protein database with the DALI server (Holm & Rosenström, 2010), the highest score is for CrPV VP1 as expected, but picornavirus VP3 is close behind, suggesting a relatively close relation between the two proteins. In contrast, when looking at VP2, the closest match after CrPV is the jelly roll from the capsid protein of Norwalk virus, which is not a picornavirus and exhibits T = 3 symmetry. It is of course impossible to define an evolutionary path from these data, but it serves to highlight how intriguing the conservation of the DDF triad in VP3 and VP1 within the same structural motif is.
4. Conclusions
In this work, we analyzed the structure of the TrV capsid and compared it with that of CrPV. These are the only members of the Dicistroviridae family for which the capsid structure is known at atomic resolution. The salient capsid features that differentiate dicistroviruses from enteroviruses in the Picornaviridae family are the absence of both the canyon and the pocket factor, and the swapping of the VP2 N-tail. The absence of the canyon on the TrV and CrPV capsid surfaces strongly suggests a different approach to receptor binding to that of the majority of picornaviruses. TrV and CrPV also lack the characteristic enterovirus pocket factor found in the interior of the VP1 β-barrel; this implies that capsid stabilization in both of the insect viruses differs from that in most picornaviruses. The domain swapping in both TrV and CrPV, through the twofold axis of the icosahedral capsid, suggests that the assembly mechanism in dicistroviruses may be different to that in picornaviruses, which occurs through pentameric intermediates (Rossmann & Tao, 1999).
The two main differences that we observe between the TrV and CrPV capsids are the projections at the TrV surface, which are absent in CrPV. These projections are made from an inserted sequence element, and the presence of the same insertion in other members of the proposed genus Triatovirus (Agirre et al., 2011) suggest that they are also likely to have the same structural features. The structure suggests that the exposed residues in these projections are likely to play a role in the interactions with the host; for instance, an entry receptor. Knowledge of this feature therefore now opens the way to site-directed mutagenesis in order to understand the functional importance of the residues that are exposed at the projections.
The second difference is the presence of a DDF motif in the homologous location in VP3, where it is also exposed to the capsid interior, whereas in CrPV this motif is only found in VP1, where it is believed to account for cleavage of the VP0 precursor. This difference may account for additional proteolysis in VP1 during RNA release, as discussed above, but further studies are necessary in order to test this hypothesis.
Finally, the most striking difference is the absence of ordered VP4. The fact that this protein is not part of the ordered capsid in fully infectious TrV virions is in sharp contrast to what occurs with the same protein in CrPV, where it is found to be well structured around the fivefold axis. Such differences preclude assignment of a general function to VP4 in the Dicistroviridae family, and this also remains to be further elucidated.
To conclude, the new structural data presented here now open the way for functional studies to understand the important steps of the TrV cycle, such as its assembly during exit and uncoating during entry. If this virus is to be used as a biological control against Chagas disease, the more knowledge that we can gather about it the better prepared we will be to overcome the inherent difficulties that are related to this type of approach.
The atomic coordinates and structure factors for TrV have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (https://www.pdb.org) as entry 3nap. The theoretical model for VP4 has been deposited in the Protein Model DataBase (https://mi.caspur.it/PMDB) with code PM0077751.
Supporting information
Supporting information file. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S0907444913004617/mn5025sup1.pdf
Footnotes
‡These authors contributed equally to this work.
§Present address: Institut Curie, 26 Rue d'Ulm, 75248 Paris CEDEX 05, France.
¶Present address: Plataforma Automatitzada de Cristal.lografía, Institute for Research in Biomedicine, Barcelona, Spain.
‡‡Present address: Institut de Biologie Structurale Jean-Pierre Ebel, 41 Rue Jules Horowitz, 38027 Grenoble CEDEX 1, France
§§Present address: Institut Pasteur, Unité de Virologie Structurale, CNRS UMR 3569, 25 Rue du Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris CEDEX 15, France
1Supplementary material has been deposited in the IUCr electronic archive (Reference: MN5025). Services for accessing this material are described at the back of the journal.
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to Stephane Duquerroy for his valuable help, the Servicio Nacional de Chagas, Córdoba, Argentina for the gift of T. infestans colonies and the staff of ID14-1 of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) for their support. FAR, SB and JN are members of the CNRS, France. GS acknowledges the French Ministère de l'Education Nationale et de la Recherche for a graduate student fellowship. JA is supported by a UPV/EHU contract (UPV-IT-461-07). GAM is a researcher of the CONICET, Argentina. JP acknowledges EMBO (ALTF 230/2002) and the European Commission (HPMF-CT-2002-01805) for fellowships. This work was partially supported by a SECYT–UNS 24/F035 and CYTED 209RT0364 action (RedTrV: https://www.redtrv.org), both granted to DMAG, who is a visiting Professor of the Vasque Country University and partially supported by the Bizkaia:Xede association and MICINN. FAR acknowledges support from the CNRS for this project. During this work, JA undertook a one-month stay at the Institut Pasteur (Paris, France), supported partially by the FBB and under the supervision of FAR.
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