Mechanism of capsid assembly for an icosahedral plant virus

Virology. 2000 Nov 25;277(2):450-6. doi: 10.1006/viro.2000.0619.

Abstract

Capsids of spherical viruses share a common architecture: an icosahedral arrangement of identical proteins. We suggest that there may be a limited number of common assembly mechanisms for such viruses. Previous assembly mechanisms were proposed on the basis of virion structure but were not rigorously tested. Here we apply a rigorous analysis of assembly to cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV), a typical, small, positive-strand RNA virus. The atomic resolution structure of CCMV revealed an interleaving of subunits around the quasi-sixfold vertices, which suggested that capsid assembly was initiated by a hexamer of dimers (Speir et al., 1995, Structure 3, 63-78). However, we find that the capsid protein readily forms pentamers of dimers in solution, based on polymerization kinetics observed by light scattering. Capsid assembly is nucleated by a pentamer, determined from analysis of the extent of assembly by size-exclusion chromatography. Subsequent assembly likely proceeds by the cooperative addition of dimers, leading to the T = 3 icosahedral capsid. At high protein concentrations, the concentration-dependent nucleation reaction causes an overabundance of five-dimer nuclei that can be identified by classical light scattering. In turn these associate to form incomplete capsids and pseudo-T = 2 capsids, assembled by oligomerization of 12 pentamers of dimers. The experimentally derived assembly mechanisms of T = 3 and pseudo-T = 2 CCMV capsids are directly relevant to interpreting the structure and assembly of other T = 3 viruses such as Norwalk virus and pseudo-T = 2 viruses such as the vp3 core of blue tongue virus.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Bromovirus / growth & development*
  • Bromovirus / metabolism
  • Bromovirus / ultrastructure
  • Capsid / analysis
  • Capsid / biosynthesis*
  • Chromatography, Gel
  • Dimerization
  • Microscopy, Electron
  • Plant Viral Movement Proteins
  • Plants / virology*
  • Viral Proteins / biosynthesis*

Substances

  • Plant Viral Movement Proteins
  • Viral Proteins