In Situ Spatial Organization of Potato Virus A Coat Protein Subunits as Assessed by Tritium Bombardment

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

American Society for Microbiology

RESUMO

Potato virus A (PVA) particles were bombarded with thermally activated tritium atoms, and the intramolecular distribution of the label in the amino acids of the coat protein was determined to assess their in situ steric accessibility. This method revealed that the N-terminal 15 amino acids of the PVA coat protein and a region comprising amino acids 27 to 50 are the most accessible at the particle surface to labeling with tritium atoms. A model of the spatial arrangement of the PVA coat protein polypeptide chain within the virus particle was derived from the experimental data obtained by tritium bombardment combined with predictions of secondary-structure elements and the principles of packing α-helices and β-structures in proteins. The model predicts three regions of tertiary structure: (i) the surface-exposed N-terminal region, comprising an unstructured N terminus of 8 amino acids and two β-strands, (ii) a C-terminal region including two α-helices, as well as three β-strands that form a two-layer structure called an abCd unit, and (iii) a central region comprising a bundle of four α-helices in a fold similar to that found in tobacco mosaic virus coat protein. This is the first model of the three-dimensional structure of a potyvirus coat protein.

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