Abstract
Our studies on the assembly of hepatitis B virus capsids or core particles in Xenopus oocytes have demonstrated that unassembled p21.5 core proteins ("free p21.5") provide a pool of low-molecular-mass precursors for core-particle assembly. Here we have characterized this material. Free p21.5 sedimented through gradients of 3-25% sucrose (wt/vol) as a single protein species of approximately 40 kDa, corresponding to a p21.5 dimer. On nonreducing SDS/polyacrylamide gels, free p21.5 migrated as disulfide-linked p21.5 dimeric species of 35 and 37 kDa. Truncated core proteins lacking most or all of the 36-amino acid protamine region at the p21.5 carboxyl terminus were also found to behave as disulfide-linked dimers with appropriately reduced molecular masses. Our experiments failed to reveal monomeric core proteins or stable intermediates between dimers and capsids along the assembly pathway. We conclude that hepatitis B virus core particles are most likely assembled by aggregating 90 (or possibly 180) disulfide-linked p21.5 dimers. We discuss similarities between the assembly of hepatitis B virus capsids and simple T = 3 plant virus and bacteriophage structures.
Dates
Type | When |
---|---|
Created | 19 years, 3 months ago (May 31, 2006, 8:11 a.m.) |
Deposited | 3 years, 4 months ago (April 13, 2022, 1:49 p.m.) |
Indexed | 4 months, 3 weeks ago (April 8, 2025, 10:18 p.m.) |
Issued | 32 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1992) |
Published | 32 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1992) |
Published Online | 32 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1992) |
Published Print | 32 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1992) |
@article{Zhou_1992, title={Hepatitis B virus capsid particles are assembled from core-protein dimer precursors.}, volume={89}, ISSN={1091-6490}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.21.10046}, DOI={10.1073/pnas.89.21.10046}, number={21}, journal={Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, publisher={Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, author={Zhou, S and Standring, D N}, year={1992}, month=nov, pages={10046–10050} }