Zhao, Gongpu; Perilla, Juan R.; Yufenyuy, Ernest L.; Meng, Xin; Chen, Bo; Ning, Jiying; Ahn, Jinwoo; Gronenborn, Angela M.; Schulten, Klaus; Aiken, Christopher; Zhang, Peijun
Mature HIV-1 capsid structure by cryo-electron microscopy and all-atom molecular dynamics
NATURE, 497:643-646, MAY 30 2013

Retroviral capsid proteins are conserved structurally but assemble into different morphologies(1). The mature human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) capsid is best described by a 'fullerene cone' model(2,3), in which hexamers of the capsid protein are linked to form a hexagonal surface lattice that is closed by incorporating 12 capsid-protein pentamers. HIV-1 capsid protein contains an amino-terminal domain (NTD) comprising seven alpha-helices and a beta-hairpin(4,5), a carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) comprising four alpha-helices(6,7), and a flexible linker with a 3(10)-helix connecting the two structural domains(8). Structures of the capsid-protein assembly units have been determined by X-ray crystallography(9,10); however, structural information regarding the assembled capsid and the contacts between the assembly units is incomplete. Here we report the cryo-electron microscopy structure of a tubular HIV-1 capsid-protein assembly at 8 angstrom resolution and the three-dimensional structure of a native HIV-1 core by cryo-electron tomography. The structure of the tubular assembly shows, at the three-fold interface(11), a three-helix bundle with critical hydrophobic interactions. Mutagenesis studies confirm that hydrophobic residues in the centre of the three-helix bundle are crucial for capsid assembly and stability, and for viral infectivity. The cryo-electron-microscopy structures enable modelling by large-scale molecular dynamics simulation, resulting in all-atom models for the hexamer-of-hexamer and pentamer-of-hexamer elements as well as for the entire capsid. Incorporation of pentamers results in closer trimer contacts and induces acute surface curvature. The complete atomic HIV-1 capsid model provides a platform for further studies of capsid function and for targeted pharmacological intervention.

DOI:10.1038/nature12162

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