Leandro F. Estrozi's research while affiliated with Université Grenoble Alpes and other places

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Publications (61)


Cryo-EM structure of influenza helical nucleocapsid reveals NP-NP and NP-RNA interactions as a model for the genome encapsidation
  • Article

December 2023

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68 Reads

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4 Citations

Science Advances

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Leandro F. Estrozi

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Influenza virus genome encapsidation is essential for the formation of a helical viral ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) complex composed of nucleoproteins (NP), the trimeric polymerase, and the viral genome. Although low-resolution vRNP structures are available, it remains unclear how the viral RNA is encapsidated and how NPs assemble into the helical filament specific of influenza vRNPs. In this study, we established a biological tool, the RNP-like particles assembled from recombinant influenza A virus NP and synthetic RNA, and we present the first subnanometric cryo–electron microscopy structure of the helical NP-RNA complex (8.7 to 5.3 Å). The helical RNP-like structure reveals a parallel double-stranded conformation, allowing the visualization of NP-NP and NP-RNA interactions. The RNA, located at the interface of neighboring NP protomers, interacts with conserved residues previously described as essential for the NP-RNA interaction. The NP undergoes conformational changes to enable RNA binding and helix formation. Together, our findings provide relevant insights for understanding the mechanism for influenza genome encapsidation.

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Figure 1. Native-like eisosomes retain unperturbed plasma membrane microdomain. A. Central 1050 ("transverse" above and "sagittal" below) slices of helical reconstruction of a native eisosome with 1051 membrane bilayer visible. B. Sharpened maps of 9 helical structures of varying diameter. C. Model of Pil1 1052 dimer, rainbow coloring on chain A from Nt (blue) to Ct (red). [inset] Zoom on AH. D. Series of one-pixel 1053 slices through helical reconstruction of native eisosome, separated by ~5.3Å depth. Cyan arrow indicates 1054 AH (panel 1), violet arrow indicates membrane voids (panels 2-3). Void pattern continues through 1055
Figure 2. Sterols are stabilized by the Pil1/Lsp1 amphipathic helix within the eisosome membrane 1060 microdomain. A-D. Parallel slice at maximum amphipathic helix density of unsharpened maps of native 1061 (A), "-PI(4,5)P2/+sterol" reconstituted (B), "+PI(4,5)P2/-sterol" reconstituted (C), and "+PI(4,5)P2/+sterol" 1062 reconstituted (D) eisosomes. E. Distance between the center of mass of the AH and lipids' head groups in 1063 CG simulations of different lipid compositions. F-H. Membrane voids pattern within the cytoplasmic leaflet 1064 in native (F), "+PI(4,5)P2/-sterol" reconstituted (G), and "+PI(4,5)P2/+sterol" reconstituted eisosomes (H). I. 1065 CG-MD snapshot showing AH-cholesterol interactions. Inset image: membrane voids with numbers 1066 indicating individual sterol dwell sites J. Occupancy of cholesterol at amphipathic helix residues in 1067 +PI(4,5)P2/+sterol system in CG-MD simulations. K. FRAP of TopFluor-cholesterol in control samples 1068 without protein and with Pil1 in presence and absence of 1% PI(4,5)P2. Solid lines indicate a mean of n 1069 number of measured nanotubes with standard deviation shown. Dashed lines indicate the fitted data. 1070
Figure 3. Reconstitution of purified Pil1 with lipids of known composition enables identification of 1071 structural signatures in native membrane. A. Lipid headgroup densities (sea green for PI(4,5)P2, grey 1072 for PS) in lipid binding pockets of native (orange), "+PI(4,5)P2/-sterol" reconstituted (lime green), and 1073
Cryo-EM data collection, refinement and validation statistics
Yeast strains used in this study Name Genotype Source
CryoEM architecture of a native stretch-sensitive membrane microdomain
  • Preprint
  • File available

August 2023

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167 Reads

Biological membranes are partitioned into functional zones containing specific lipids and proteins, termed membrane microdomains. Their composition and organization remain controversial owing to a paucity of techniques that can visualize lipids in situ without disrupting their native behavior. The yeast eisosome, a membrane compartment scaffolded by the BAR-domain proteins Pil1 and Lsp1, senses and responds to mechanical stress by flattening and releasing sequestered factors. Here, we isolated native eisosomes as helical filaments of Pil1/Lsp1 lattice bound to plasma membrane lipids and solved their structures by helical reconstruction. We observe remarkable organization within the lipid bilayer density from which we could assign headgroups of PI(4,5)P2 and phosphatidylserine bound to Pil1/Lsp1 and a pattern of membrane voids, signatures of sterols, beneath an amphipathic helix. We verified these assignments using in vitro reconstitutions and molecular dynamics simulations. 3D variability analysis of the native eisosomes revealed a dynamic stretching of the Pil1/Lsp1 lattice that affects functionally important lipid sequestration, supporting a mechanism in which membrane stretching liberates lipids otherwise anchored by the Pil1/Lsp1 coat. Our results provide mechanistic insight into how eisosome BAR-domain proteins create a mechanosensitive membrane microdomain and, more globally, resolve long-standing controversies about the architecture and nature of lipid microdomains.

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Figure 2: Structures of the mimivirus genomic fiber for Cl1a [A-C], Cl3a [D-F], and Cl2
Figure 4: RNA polymerase could be associated to the genomic fiber. A] Micrograph of
Figures
The giant mimivirus 1.2 Mb genome is elegantly organized into a 30 nm diameter helical protein shield

July 2022

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167 Reads

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15 Citations

eLife

Mimivirus is the prototype of the Mimiviridae family of giant dsDNA viruses. Little is known about the organization of the 1.2 Mb genome inside the membrane-limited nucleoid filling the ~0.5 µm icosahedral capsids. Cryo-electron microscopy, cryo-electron tomography and proteomics revealed that it is encased into a ~30 nm diameter helical protein shell surprisingly composed of two GMC-type oxidoreductases, which also form the glycosylated fibrils decorating the capsid. The genome is arranged in 5- or 6-start left-handed super-helices, with each DNA-strand lining the central channel. This luminal channel of the nucleoprotein fiber is wide enough to accommodate oxidative stress proteins and RNA polymerase subunits identified by proteomics. Such elegant supramolecular organization would represent a remarkable evolutionary strategy for packaging and protecting the genome, in a state ready for immediate transcription upon unwinding in the host cytoplasm. The parsimonious use of the same protein in two unrelated substructures of the virion is unexpected for a giant virus with thousand genes at its disposal.


The giant Mimivirus 1.2 Mb genome is elegantly organized into a 30 nm helical protein shield

February 2022

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80 Reads

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5 Citations

Mimivirus is the prototype of the Mimiviridae family of giant dsDNA viruses. Little is known about the organization of the 1.2 Mb genome inside the membrane-limited nucleoid filling the ∼0.5 µm icosahedral capsids. Cryo-electron microscopy, cryo-electron tomography and proteomics revealed that it is encased into a ∼30 nm diameter helical protein shell surprisingly composed of two GMC-type oxidoreductases, which also form the glycosylated fibrils decorating the capsid. The genome is arranged in 5- or 6-start left-handed super-helices, with each DNA-strand lining the central channel. This luminal channel of the nucleoprotein fiber is wide enough to accommodate oxidative stress proteins and RNA polymerase subunits identified by proteomics. Such elegant supramolecular organization would represent a remarkable evolutionary strategy for packaging and protecting the genome, in a state ready for immediate transcription upon unwinding in the host cytoplasm. The parsimonious use of the same protein in two unrelated substructures of the virion is unexpected for a giant virus with thousand genes at its disposal. One-Sentence Summary Mimivirus genome organization in the icosahedral virion.



Fig. 1 MreC Pa self-associates in vitro into bundles, tubes, and antiparallel filaments. a Domain scheme of selected MreC variants. β-barrels were aligned to the 'butterfly' region of MreC from P. aeruginosa (the β-sandwich core). b SV-AUC sedimentation curves for MreC Pa , MreC Ec , and MreC Ab. All three variants display very large s values in AUC, with MreC from P. aeruginosa showing the highest propensity to generate the largest oligomeric forms. Inset curves display different sedimentation ranges, with 0-50 (s) indicating the presence of oligomers from the three species, and the 200-700 (s) range indicating a pronounced peak for MreC Pa only. c Negative stain electron micrographs showing higher order structures formed by recombinant MreC Pa which were suitable for cryo-EM studies. The bars indicate 50 nm. During this study, over 300 images were made, and more than 20 grids prepared in total. d The same sample shown by cryo-EM reveals forms with diameters of 180 and 220 Å, and is a representative of images obtained from three different cryo-EM experiments, with 4 grids being prepared for the one highlighted here. e, f MreC Pa self-associates into tubes formed by six sets of antiparallel protofilaments. Individual protofilaments are shown in cyan and green. Inner and outer tube dimensions correspond to 150 Å and 280 Å, respectively. The tubular structures shown above represent the most stable in vitro form that allowed structural characterization. Source data are provided as a Source Data file.
Fig. 2 MreC Pa associates head-to-tail through three main conserved regions. a Details of the cryo-EM map of an MreC filament; N-termini are aligned along each protofilament, with the flexible N-terminus pointing towards the outside. b The minimal repeating unit that displays all interfaces is shown as a tetramer for simplicity. Key residues studied by mutagenesis are highlighted as sticks. Regions 1, 2, and 3 are highlighted in blue, orange, and red circles, respectively. c Phylogenetic tree of MreC variants in Proteobacteria, highlighting the conservation of the three interaction regions studied in this work. Proteobacterial MreC sequences were aligned using PROMALS3D and a Maximum Likelihood tree was generated using MEGA X. Apolar amino acids (PIFAVLM) in Region 1 are depicted in blue, the Arg in Region 2 is shown in orange and charged (EDRK) and polar (QTSY) amino acids in Region 3 are shown as full or empty red squares, respectively. A and B indicate residue positions within Regions 1 and 3. Note that the highest level of conservation of the three key MreC regions lies within β-and γ-proteobacteria.
Fig. 3 Lateral and longitudinal interactions play key roles in MreC association. (left) MreC Pa-Region1 is able to form tube-like structures that resemble MreC Pa(36-330) (4 grids, 42 images). (center) MreC Pa-Region2 does not generate any large oligomeric forms that can be visualized by negative-staining EM (4 grids, 39 images), and SV-AUC (Supplementary Fig. 7) indicates a sedimentation profile that is indicative of a much smaller species. (right) MreC PaRegion3 forms thin fibers that are distinct from those observed for MreC Pa(36-330) (9 grids, 80 images). Scale bars in EM images correspond to 50 nm.
Self-association of MreC as a regulatory signal in bacterial cell wall elongation

May 2021

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129 Reads

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11 Citations

Nature Communications

The elongasome, or Rod system, is a protein complex that controls cell wall formation in rod-shaped bacteria. MreC is a membrane-associated elongasome component that co-localizes with the cytoskeletal element MreB and regulates the activity of cell wall biosynthesis enzymes, in a process that may be dependent on MreC self-association. Here, we use electron cryo-microscopy and X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of a self-associated form of MreC from Pseudomonas aeruginosa in atomic detail. MreC monomers interact in head-to-tail fashion. Longitudinal and lateral interfaces are essential for oligomerization in vitro, and a phylogenetic analysis of proteobacterial MreC sequences indicates the prevalence of the identified interfaces. Our results are consistent with a model where MreC’s ability to alternate between self-association and interaction with the cell wall biosynthesis machinery plays a key role in the regulation of elongasome activity.


3D structure of three jumbo phage heads

August 2020

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82 Reads

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9 Citations

Journal of General Virology

Jumbo phages are bacteriophages that carry more than 200 kbp of DNA. In this study we characterized two jumbo phages (ΦRSL2 and ΦXacN1) and one semi-jumbo phage (ΦRP13) at the structural level by cryo-electron microscopy. Focusing on their capsids, three-dimensional structures of the heads at resolutions ranging from 16 to 9 Å were calculated. Based on these structures we determined the geometrical basis on which the icosahedral capsids of these phages are constructed, which includes the accessory and decorative proteins that complement them. A triangulation number novel to Myoviridae (ΦRP13; T =21) was discovered as well as two others, which are more common for jumbo phages ( T =27 and T =28). Based on one of the structures we also provide evidence that accessory or decorative proteins are not a prerequisite for maintaining the structural integrity of very large capsids.


Figure 1. Electron microscopy of phAPEC6. (A) Negative staining image of phAPEC6. Six short tail fibers (arrows) on the base plate are clearly visible. (B) Different phAPEC6 particles display hairy appendages, sticking out from the tail but also from the capsid (arrows). Those attached to the capsid seem to be trimers (inset). The scale bar represents 50 nm.
Figure 3. Detailed 3D reconstruction of the phAPEC6 capsid: (A) Isosurface representation of the phAPEC6 head 3D reconstruction at a 10-Å resolution. The particle is colored according to its diameter (from red to blue). (B) Central slice of the phAPEC6 head visualizing 15 concentric layers of DNA (black arrows). (C) Close-up view of one 6-fold axis. The major capsid protein (MCP) is colored in orange and the decoration protein in yellow. The black oval highlights a local 2-fold axis. (D) Fitting of the HK97 MCP X-ray structure into the phAPEC6 hexamer density seen from the outside of the particle (an arrow highlights the long alpha helix present in both HK97 and phAPEC6 MCP) and (E) seen from the inside of the particle. (F) Detail of the hexamer central protein along a 2-fold axis, displaying the fiber-anchoring protein. (G) Side view of the fiber-anchoring protein. (H) Close-up view of the 5-fold axis. The pentamer is colored in blue and highlighted by a black circle. The same protein as the one colored in yellow in part C is visible around the 5-fold axis.
Figure 4. Cryo-electron microscopy of phAPEC6. (A) Low-dose and high-dose cryo-electron microscopy images of phAPEC6 demonstrate the presence of an inner body. (B) Cryo-electron microscopy images of the contracted form of phAPEC6. The capsid has released all the DNA, the tail is contracted and the presence of a little piece of host cell membrane is visible (arrow).
Figure 5. 3D reconstruction of the entire tail. (A) A negative staining image of phAPEC6. The different fibers are labeled 1*, 2*, 3* and 4* (for the baseplate one). (B) 3D reconstruction of the entire tail at a normal threshold (resolution 25 Å). The baseplate plus fiber are colored in yellow and pink; the different fibers anchored in the tail (1*, 2* and 3*) are in light pink; a decoration protein present at 2 levels of the tail is colored in brown and the collar and the portal are colored respectively in blue and red. (C) Distal part of the tail at a high contour level: the fibers located at the 2*-level are visible. The same color code as in B has been used. (D) Detail of the baseplate at a higher contour level. The host membrane patch (green), as well as some fibers connected to the membrane, are visible (red). (E) Bottom view of the baseplate showing the complex organization of this part.
Structural proteome of PhAPEC6.
Structural Analysis of Jumbo Coliphage phAPEC6

April 2020

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396 Reads

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15 Citations

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

The phAPEC6 genome encodes 551 predicted gene products, with the vast majority (83%) of unknown function. Of these, 62 have been identified as virion-associated proteins by mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS), including the major capsid protein (Gp225; present in 1620 copies), which shows a HK97 capsid protein-based fold. Cryo-electron microscopy experiments showed that the 350-kbp DNA molecule of Escherichia coli virus phAPEC6 is packaged in at least 15 concentric layers in the phage capsid. A capsid inner body rod is also present, measuring about 91 nm by 18 nm and oriented along the portal axis. In the phAPEC6 contractile tail, 25 hexameric stacked rings can be distinguished, built of the identified tail sheath protein (Gp277). Cryo-EM reconstruction reveals the base of the unique hairy fibers observed during an initial transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis. These very unusual filaments are ordered at three annular positions along the contractile sheath, as well as around the capsid, and may be involved in host interaction.


Fig. 4 Structure of the TET2 dodecamer from EM/NMR. a Overall view of the dodecamer, highlighting in color one out of the 12 modeled subunits, obtained from joint refinement of 12 subunits against NMR and EM data. b Bundle of 10 structures of one monomer, with an accuracy of 0.7 Å (backbone RMSD relative to crystal structure). The loop region, residues 120-138, which has not been modeled in the crystal structure (PDB 1y0r) is encircled in (b), and shown in the view of the interior of the cavity (c) and as a zoom (d). The EM map around the loop region, seen by cryo-EM (d) is of significantly higher intensity than in the 100 K crystal structure (1y0r). The backbone structure in both panels is from the present NMR/EM study. e, f Results of NMR/EM structure calculation using only EM data truncated to 6 or 8 Å resolution, resulting in backbone RMSD to the crystal structure of 1.8 and 2.6 Å, respectively. The inserts above the structures in (b, e, f) represent typical α-helical densities at the respective resolution levels
Experimental NMR and EM data of the 468 kDa TET2 assembly. a MAS NMR and b solution-NMR spectra of TET2, showing high resolution despite the large subunit size. c Experimental 4.1 Å resolution cryo-EM electron-density map. d Secondary structure of TET2, derived from MAS NMR resonance assignments and the TALOS-N software²⁰, shown as a function of the residue number. Residues shown with shorter bars were not assigned, and the secondary structure assignment results from a database approach in TALOS-N. e Experimentally detected intra-subunit long-range distance restraints from solution-NMR and MAS NMR, displayed through lines connecting residues in close spatial proximity. Note that part of these distance restraints were spectrally ambiguous, i.e., could be assigned to several atom-atom pairs, and was rendered unambiguous throughout the structure calculation approach (displayed in red). See Table 1 for restraints statistics. All NMR experiments performed in this study and acquisition parameters are listed in Supplementary Tables 2–5. f α-Helices detected by the helixhunter2 software25,50 in the EM map truncated to 8 Å resolution. Symmetry-related α-helices are shown in equal colors. Additional β-sheet parts, automatically detected by gorgon⁵¹ are shown in Supplementary Fig. 8A. g Zoom on one subunit, identified by a clustering analysis (Supplementary Fig. 8). The five longest α-helices, used for the initial structure calculation steps are labeled with A to E in order of decreasing length (see Table 1)
Integrated NMR/EM structure determination approach. a In step 1, 40 different assignment possibilities of the five longest helical stretches in the sequence (TALOS) to cylindrical (helical) densities (“α-helix-to-density assignments”) are used in regular NMR-type structure calculations (CYANA). b Ranking of the 20 solutions from these structure calculations by the CYANA target score and the overlap of the α-helices with the cylindrical density features. Each point represents the average of the 10 lowest-energy structures. c Two example cases are shown with incorrect (top) and correct (bottom) assignments, clearly showing that incorrect α-helix-to-density assignment is not compatible with good map overlap. For simplicity, only the lowest-energy structure is shown. The structure with the correct helix-to-density assignment (labeled as Example 2) has a backbone root-mean-square-deviation, RMSD, to the crystal structure of 7.4 Å, and a backbone bundle-RMSD computed from the 20 lowest-energy models of 11.4 Å. d In step 2, the structure of the TET2 monomeric subunit with the correct α-helix-to-density assignment is iteratively refined by flexible fitting into the EM map (truncated at 8 Å resolution), and CYANA calculations with an increasing number of unambiguous NMR restraints and restraints from the fit in the EM map. After convergence, defined by at least three cycles with an RMSD-difference below 10% (shown in (e)), the structure is refined against the EM map of the entire dodecameric ensemble and all NMR restraints, using XPLOR-NIH, using maps with increasing resolution (8, 6, 4.1 Å; step 3). e Root-mean-square-deviation (RMSD) of the structures at different steps of the protocol, relative to the mean structure
Structure refinement from NMR and EM data. a Zoom onto selected parts of the TET2 structure along the different steps of the structure determination process. The 3D EM map used at 8 Å resolution (steps 1 and 2) and 4.1 Å resolution (step 3) is shown as a gray surface. The structures shown correspond to the lowest-energy models generated by CYANA (steps 1 and 2) or XPLOR-NIH (step 3). A comprehensive view of the evolution of all structure elements is provided in Supplementary Fig. 11. b Residue-wise heavy-atom backbone RMSD relative to the crystal structure throughout different steps of the structure determination protocol
Integrated NMR and cryo-EM atomic-resolution structure determination of a half-megadalton enzyme complex

June 2019

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486 Reads

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91 Citations

Nature Communications

Atomic-resolution structure determination is crucial for understanding protein function. Cryo-EM and NMR spectroscopy both provide structural information, but currently cryo-EM does not routinely give access to atomic-level structural data, and, generally, NMR structure determination is restricted to small (<30 kDa) proteins. We introduce an integrated structure determination approach that simultaneously uses NMR and EM data to overcome the limits of each of these methods. The approach enables structure determination of the 468 kDa large dodecameric aminopeptidase TET2 to a precision and accuracy below 1 Å by combining secondary-structure information obtained from near-complete magic-angle-spinning NMR assignments of the 39 kDa-large subunits, distance restraints from backbone amides and ILV methyl groups, and a 4.1 Å resolution EM map. The resulting structure exceeds current standards of NMR and EM structure determination in terms of molecular weight and precision. Importantly, the approach is successful even in cases where only medium-resolution cryo-EM data are available.


In situ Structure of Rotavirus VP1 RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase

June 2019

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420 Reads

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44 Citations

Journal of Molecular Biology

Rotaviruses, like other non-enveloped, double-strand RNA viruses, package an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) with each duplex of their segmented genomes. Rotavirus cell entry results in loss of an outer protein layer and delivery into the cytosol of an intact, inner capsid particle (the "double-layer particle," or DLP). The RdRp, designated VP1, is active inside the DLP; each VP1 achieves many rounds of mRNA transcription from its associated genome segment. Previous work has shown that one VP1 molecule lies close to each 5-fold axis of the icosahedrally symmetric DLP, just beneath the inner surface of its protein shell, embedded in tightly packed RNA. We have determined a high-resolution structure for the rotavirus VP1 RdRp in situ, by local reconstruction of density around individual 5-fold positions. We have analyzed intact virions ("triple-layer particles"), non-transcribing DLPs and transcribing DLPs. Outer layer dissociation enables the DLP to synthesize RNA, in vitro as well as in vivo, but appears not to induce any detectable structural change in the RdRp. Addition of NTPs, Mg(2+), and S-adenosylmethionine, which allows active transcription, results in conformational rearrangements, in both VP1 and the DLP capsid shell protein, that allow a transcript to exit the polymerase and the particle. The position of VP1 (among the five symmetrically related alternatives) at one vertex does not correlate with its position at other vertices. This stochastic distribution of site occupancies limits long-range order in the 11-segment, double-strand RNA genome.


Citations (31)


... NP serves as the structural scaffold of vRNPs and consists of a head domain, a body domain, and a tail loop (14). Within vRNPs, each NP protomer binds approximately 12 nucleotides (15,16), and vRNA regions located between such NP-bound sites tend to form secondary structures. NP binds the vRNAs unevenly and without clear sequence or structure specificity (17,18), possibly through electrostatic interactions between a positively charged RNA-binding groove located between the head and body domains of NP and the negatively charged sugar-phosphate backbone of the vRNAs (14,19,20). ...

Reference:

Functionality of IAV packaging signals depends on site-specific charges within the viral nucleoprotein
Cryo-EM structure of influenza helical nucleocapsid reveals NP-NP and NP-RNA interactions as a model for the genome encapsidation
  • Citing Article
  • December 2023

Science Advances

... 35 For instance, the L829 and L725 genes, which codify proteins with unknown functions, and the R135 gene, which codifies a putative GMCoxidoreductase, were also associated with mimivirus fibrils in previous works. 36,37 Boyer et al. obtained an artificial mimivirus strain called M4 after several blind passages of APMV in axenic amoebae culture. M4 has a reduction of ~200,000 bp in its genome, and its particles have a bald appearance with fewer fibrils. ...

The giant mimivirus 1.2 Mb genome is elegantly organized into a 30 nm diameter helical protein shield

eLife

... Functional predictions alone must be treated with some caution owing to the propensity of viruses to co-opt proteins for alternative functions. Two excellent examples that have been discovered recently include a glycosyl hydrolase and oxidoreductase that have been co-opted to function as structural proteins in pandoraviruses and mimiviruses, respectively [78,79]. At the same time, other proteins may have retained similar functions to their cellular homologs despite diverging so far that sequence homology is no longer detectable [80]. ...

The giant Mimivirus 1.2 Mb genome is elegantly organized into a 30 nm helical protein shield

... MipA and MipB proteins are associated with the membrane and co-purify when expressed in E. coli. MipA localization in Caulobacter crescentus was dependent on MreC, a proposed scaffold protein in bacterial elongasome (62,63). Moreover, MipA was proposed to be tethered to both outer and inner membranes through interaction with MltA and PBP1b (64). ...

Self-association of MreC as a regulatory signal in bacterial cell wall elongation

Nature Communications

... Mature Carin-1 phages were produced and purified as described in the materials and methods section. They were first imaged by negative staining (14) to check the quality of the sample. Cryo-EM images showed a good homogeneity of the sample with only a small proportion of the phage capsids being empty of DNA or damaged (Fig. S1a). ...

3D structure of three jumbo phage heads
  • Citing Article
  • August 2020

Journal of General Virology

... a) Head diameter: 150 nm, tail length: 210 nm. b) Head diameter: 120 nm, the 168 nm long tail displays associated "whisker-like" fibers with remote resemblance to jumbo coliphage phAPEC683 . c) Head diameter: 129 nm, tail length: 220 nm. ...

Structural Analysis of Jumbo Coliphage phAPEC6

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

... Among these gene segments, gene segment 4 has been implicated in RV HRR; however, the contribution of gene segments 1 and 10 to HRR is less clear. VP1 interaction with VP2 is critical for transcription and genome replication [35]. Group A RVs have 28 VP1 genotypes and 24 VP2 genotypes (Rotavirus Classification Working Group: RCWG updated on April 3rd 2023 (https://rega.kuleuven.be/cev/viralmetagenomics/virus-classification/ ...

In situ Structure of Rotavirus VP1 RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase

Journal of Molecular Biology

... With this method, structure determination becomes highly challenging for proteins larger than 50 kDa since they tumble (e.g., rotate, vibrate, translate) too slowly, involving rapid nuclear relaxations and low detection sensitivities, leading to substantial constraints in protein structure determination. A combined approach using NMR and EM data, as introduced by Gauto et al., overcomes the limitations of each method [14]. ...

Integrated NMR and cryo-EM atomic-resolution structure determination of a half-megadalton enzyme complex

Nature Communications

... This is despite the known presence of the N-domain within the sample as peptides relating to this domain were identified by mass spectrometry. N-terminal domain flexibility is common in secretins with the N0 domains of type 4 pilus system 25 and T2SS [27][28][29][30]41 secretins not resolved unless stabilised through the binding of other secretion system components at the secretin base 31,32 . In the absence of an experimentally determined model for the RcpA N-domain, a bioinformatics analysis was undertaken searching for homologues. ...

Structure and assembly of pilotin-dependent and -independent secretins of the type II secretion system
PLOS Pathogens

PLOS Pathogens

... The electrostatic interactions were calculated by the Particle Mesh Ewald algorithm, and a cutoff of 1.0 nm was used both for Lennard-Jones interaction and for the real-space coulomb contribution. The starting structure was obtained integrating the high-resolution X-ray structure of TET2 (PDB code: 1y0r) with lower resolution cryo-EM data for modelling the flexible loop (120-132), as reported in the PDB entry 6F3K 73 . The dodecamer was solvated with 77847 TIP4P/2005 74 water molecules and electroneutralized with 262 Na + and 178 Clions in a rhombic dodecahedral box with periodic boundary conditions. ...

Integrated NMR and cryo-EM atomic-resolution structure determination of a half-megadalton enzyme complex