Structure of the HIV-1 Full-Length Capsid Protein in a Conformationally Trapped Unassembled State Induced by Small-Molecule Binding

The capsid (CA) protein plays crucial roles in HIV infection and replication, essential to viral maturation. The absence of high-resolution structural data on unassembled CA hinders the development of antivirals effective in inhibiting assembly. Unlike enzymes that have targetable, functional substr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of molecular biology 2011-02, Vol.406 (3), p.371-386
Hauptverfasser: Du, Shoucheng, Betts, Laurie, Yang, Ruifeng, Shi, Haibin, Concel, Jason, Ahn, Jinwoo, Aiken, Christopher, Zhang, Peijun, Yeh, Joanne I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The capsid (CA) protein plays crucial roles in HIV infection and replication, essential to viral maturation. The absence of high-resolution structural data on unassembled CA hinders the development of antivirals effective in inhibiting assembly. Unlike enzymes that have targetable, functional substrate-binding sites, the CA does not have a known site that affects catalytic or other innate activity, which can be more readily targeted in drug development efforts. We report the crystal structure of the HIV-1 CA, revealing the domain organization in the context of the wild-type full-length (FL) unassembled CA. The FL CA adopts an antiparallel dimer configuration, exhibiting a domain organization sterically incompatible with capsid assembly. A small compound, generated in situ during crystallization, is bound tightly at a hinge site (“H site”), indicating that binding at this interdomain region stabilizes the ADP conformation. Electron microscopy studies on nascent crystals reveal both dimeric and hexameric lattices coexisting within a single condition, in agreement with the interconvertibility of oligomeric forms and supporting the feasibility of promoting assembly-incompetent dimeric states. Solution characterization in the presence of the H-site ligand shows predominantly unassembled dimeric CA, even under conditions that promote assembly. Our structure elucidation of the HIV-1 FL CA and characterization of a potential allosteric binding site provides three-dimensional views of an assembly-defective conformation, a state targeted in, and thus directly relevant to, inhibitor development. Based on our findings, we propose an unprecedented means of preventing CA assembly, by “conformationally trapping” CA in assembly-incompetent conformational states induced by H-site binding. [Display omitted] ►Crystal structure of wild-type full-length HIV-1 CA has been solved for the first time. ►A small molecule is bound at an interdomain hinge site. ►Binding at this allosteric region directs conformational state and, thus, the assembly competence of CA. ►Electron microscopy reveals multiple oligomeric forms coexist, likely crucial to its function. ►We propose an unprecedented means of preventing assembly by “conformationally trapping” CA.
ISSN:0022-2836
1089-8638
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2010.11.027