Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, March 2005, p. 3822-3830, Vol. 79, No. 6
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.6.3822-3830.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departments of Neuropharmacology,1 Cell Biology, The Scripps Research Institute,2 Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Scripps Clinic, La Jolla,4 Applied Biosystems, Foster City, California3
Received 17 June 2004/ Accepted 26 October 2004
|
|
|---|
400 to
2,000 Å. The surface spikes were spaced
100 Å apart and extended
90 Å from the maximum phospholipid headgroup density of the outer bilayer leaflet. Distinctive stalk and head regions extended radially
30 and
60 Å from the outer bilayer leaflet, respectively. Two interior layers of density apposed to the inner leaflet of the viral lipid bilayer were assigned as protein Z and nucleoprotein (NP) molecules on the basis of their appearance, spacing, and projected volume. Analysis of en face views of virions lacking the GP-C spikes showed reflections consistent with paracrystalline packing of the NP molecules in a lattice with edges of
57 and
74 Å. The structural proteins of retroviruses and arenaviruses assemble with similar radial density distributions, using common cellular components. |
|
|---|
Electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM) has revealed that pleomorphic enveloped viruses have a roughly spherical appearance, studded with projections that correspond to oligomers of the attachment and fusion proteins. Examples include influenza virus (1, 17, 41); several retroviruses, such as foamy virus (46), human immunodeficiency virus (3, 18, 22, 36, 47), murine leukemia virus (48), and Rous sarcoma virus (28, 51); La Crosse virus (44, 45); Sendai virus (24); and transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus (39).
The most recent models for the structural organization of arenaviruses date from electron microscopy studies in 1984 by Dubois-Dalcq et al. (11) and in 1987 by Young (49). To extend their analyses, we used cryo-EM and image analysis to examine three arenavirus strains that encompass the Old World and New World groups.
|
|
|---|
Removal of GP-1 from intact virions.
Purified 35S-labeled or unlabeled LCM, Pic, or Tac virions resuspended in TNE (10 mM Tris-HCl, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA [pH 7.4]) were pelleted at 4°C in an Airfuge centrifuge (Beckman Instruments, Palo Alto, Calif.) for 13 min at 22 lb/in2 (
100,000 x g). The pellets were resuspended in 1 M LiCl (pH 7.4) or 1 M NaCl (pH 5.0) and incubated for 1 h at 37°C. Control virus preparations were resuspended in TNE and incubated in parallel with the high-salt preparations. The virus samples were then loaded onto continuous 5 to 50% sucrose density gradients, and ultracentrifugation was performed in an SW 50.1 rotor for 18 h at 40,000 rpm. Gradients were fractionated by bottom puncture, and 300-µl fractions were collected. Gradient profiles were established by counting the radioactivity in aliquots of each fraction in scintillation fluid with a Beckman LS 1801 liquid scintillation counter. The protein composition of each fraction was determined by using sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide reducing gels (5, 30).
Cryo-EM and image analysis.
Cryo-EM of purified LCM, Tac, or Pic at a concentration of
1 mg/ml in TNE was performed as described previously (34). Micrographs of each preparation displaying minimal drift and astigmatism were digitized by using a Zeiss SCAI scanner with Phodis software. Images were scanned at 7 µm per pixel and twofold pixel averaging was applied, corresponding to 4 Å per pixel at the level of the specimen. The histogram for a representative portion of the image containing vitreous ice and protein was normalized by adjustment of the densitometer settings until the mean image intensity was centered as nearly as possible at a gray value of 127 on a scale of 0 to 255.
Image processing was performed with the EMAN software suite (32). Images between 1.2 and 3.1 µm under focus were selected for single particle analysis. A Gaussian low-pass filter was used to truncate frequencies beyond the first node of the contrast transfer function, which ranged from 18 to 26 Å1 for individual images, so that there were no phase reversals of the amplitudes. Side views were obtained by masking the edges of virion images in order to examine the distribution of density adjacent to the lipid bilayer. En face projections were obtained by masking the central region of each projected virion, approximately the area covered by a concentric circle with half of the virion radius. (Such images represent the superposition of densities on the near and far sides of the virions, as well as the internal contents.) Boxed images included approximately 4,000 side and 2,500 en face views of Pic, 7,500 side and 5,000 en face views of Tac, and 10,000 side and 6,500 en face views of LCM. Control images of vitreous ice or copurified empty vesicles were processed in parallel with the arenavirus images where stated. The optical density histograms for each boxed image were normalized to a common mean and standard deviation (SD) to correct for any remaining variations in optical density between individual boxed images.
The x,y origin and rotational orientation of side and en face view boxed images were aligned by 10 rounds of centering and averaging with the EMAN routine Cenalignint. The routine Startnrclasses was then used to derive an initial set of class averages by factor analysis, and k-means grouping was used to classify the images into groups. Each group contained
100 particles for the side views and
500 particles for the en face views. The images in these groups were then averaged to produce the initial class averages, which were used as the first reference set for iterative, reference-based particle classification and averaging. In this process the routine Classesbymra assigned individual particle images to a class via cross-correlation with each of the references. For each determination of an average, boxed images that deviated by 1 SD or more from the mean were excluded from the average for that particular round only. Approximately 50 to 70% of the aligned input images in a group were averaged to produce a final class average.
Virion size was estimated by averaging the maximum and minimum diameters of noncircular particles. The most circular particles were selected for determination of one-dimensional radial density profiles. Images were centered as before with Cenalignint and then rotationally averaged by using the Robem suite from Timothy S. Baker's laboratory (http://bilbo.bio.purdue.edu/
workshop/help_robem/). The characteristic density minimum in the center of the bilayer was used as a fiducial mark for alignment and averaging of the radial density profiles from particles with various diameters. Statistical operations were performed with Instat 3.0a (Graphpad). Means and SDs are reported for measurements throughout.
|
|
|---|
36 to 40 Å (35). The bilayer density was used as a fiducial mark throughout these studies. The closeness of observed and expected sizes was taken as an indication that densities visible in these images could be measured to within a few angstroms.
![]() View larger version (107K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Electron cryomicroscopy of arenaviruses. Images of native frozen-hydrated Pic (A), Tac (B), and LCM (C) virions are shown. Bar, 500 Å.
|
750 virions. Most virions clustered around the 780- and 900-Å diameters. The mean virion diameters were slightly smaller than those reported for arenaviruses grown in cell culture and in infected tissue, as observed by thin-section electron microscopy, negative-stain transmission electron microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy (reviewed in reference 26). Arenaviruses do not display the prominent seams observed in retroviral capsids (18).
![]() View larger version (164K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Comparison of arenavirus morphology and size distribution. Electron micrographs of frozen-hydrated virions of Pic (A and F), Tac (B), LCM (C), 1 M LiCl-treated LCM (D), and 1 M NaCl- and pH 5.0-treated LCM (E) are shown. The images in panels A to E were recorded at 1.5 to 1.9 µm under focus to emphasize the two leaflets of the lipid bilayer. The image in panel F was recorded at 3.0 µm under focus to emphasize the surface spikes. The distribution of native Pic, Tac, and LCM virion diameters is shown in panel G. Histograms depict the average number of virions per 4-Å-diameter increment, averaged within a 48-Å sliding window. Bar, 200 Å.
|
Layers of density are closely apposed to the inner bilayer leaflet.
Rotationally averaged radial density profiles of the most circular virions displayed a thin, concentric layer of density (designated inner track 1 [IT-1]) that was closely adherent to the inner bilayer leaflet (Fig. 3). The maximum density of IT-1 was located 46 ± 4 Å (Pic), 39 ± 4 Å (Tac), or 43 ± 5 Å (LCM) (n = 12 for each) radially inward from the maximum phospholipid headgroup density of the inner bilayer leaflet. Virions also displayed a second concentric inner track (IT-2) with a maximum density located 77 ± 6 Å (Pic), 105 ± 8 Å (Tac), or 78 ± 3 Å (LCM) (n = 12 for each) radially inward from the maximum headgroup density of the inner leaflet. LCM and Pic virions were indistinguishable, while Tacaribe virions were recognizable by the increased distance separating IT-1 from IT-2. The IT-2 layer was formed by
50-Å globular densities. Occasional threads of density appeared to connect the IT-2 density and GP domains (Fig. 4A and C), but these features were not uniformly seen. Class averages indicated that no features were reproducibly located interior to IT-2.
![]() View larger version (25K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Structural features of Pic, Tac, and LCM arenaviruses revealed by rotationally averaged radial density profiles. Twelve well-centered, circular virion projections displaying bilayer leaflets of approximately even intensity were aligned and averaged to produce each curve. The schematic interpretation identifies the peaks in the radial density plots with the viral glycoprotein oligomers (GP-C), the lipid bilayer (LB), inner track 1 (IT-1), and inner track 2 (IT-2).
|
![]() View larger version (118K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Surface features as well as inner densities (IT-1, IT-2) revealed by analysis of side views. Class averages of side views reveal the lipid bilayer (LB) and GP-C ectodomain as well as inner densities. A single globular density (D, bottom) or double-lobed projection (D, top) was visible outside the membrane of Pic (A), Tac (B), and LCM (C) viruses. Class averages had double-lobed (D, top) or single-lobed (D, bottom) LCM GP-C projections. Class averages constructed from larger fields of view revealed two concentric layers of density, designated IT-1 and IT-2, for Pic, Tac, and LCM (E, F, and G, respectively) that were closely apposed to the inner bilayer leaflet. Beneath the GP-C density were thin threads of density that connected the IT-1 and IT-2 layers. Bars, 50 Å. The images were masked so as to concentrate on two different regions: the GP-C ectodomain (A, B, and C) and the inner track densities (IT-1 and IT-2) at lower radii (E, F, and G). Boxes A to D have been resized relative to E to G to highlight structural features.
|
The large GP-C domains of Pic, Tac, and LCM are of comparable size.
For those particles in which the GP-C spikes were visible, the centers of the GP-C head domains were spaced 100 ± 7 Å (n = 33) apart. With this spacing, virions ranging from 400 to 2,000 Å would be expected to contain
50 to 1,400 GP-C oligomers apiece. The spikes of Pic, Tac, and LCM extended radially from the maximum phospholipid headgroup density of the outer bilayer leaflet 90 ± 7, 90 ± 8, and 91 ± 8 Å (n = 100), respectively. GP-C ectodomain sizes did not differ significantly by the two-tailed Mann-Whitney test.
Two-dimensional averages of side views revealed two types of images, one with uniform GP-C density and a second with split density (Fig. 4). The split-density GP-C head and stalk regions of LCM class averages measured 78 ± 7 by 60 ± 2 and 43 ± 5 by 33 ± 2 Å (width parallel to the bilayer by height perpendicular from the bilayer), respectively. The corresponding uniform-density head and stalk regions measured 67 ± 4 by 60 ± 4 and 30 ± 6 by 34 ± 3 Å, respectively (n = 10 each). These two views most likely represented projections of the GP-C complex rotated about an axis perpendicular to the membrane plane. The split-density pattern and corresponding difference in the observed width of GP-C suggested C2 symmetry, but a trimeric GP stoichiometry could not be ruled out. It is also notable that split- and uniform-density images were also observed for averages of side views of the ectodomain of the Escherichia coli F1F0 ATP synthase, which has pseudohexameric symmetry (6, 21).
The estimated volume of two stacked elliptic cylinders corresponding to the head and stalk of GP-C was 2.2 x 105 to 3.5 x 105Å3. The boundary of the ectodomain is known from sequencing of the proteolysis-resistant C-terminal fragment of GP-C (4). Using a partial specific volume of 0.73 cm3/g (23), the expected volume of a monomeric, nonglycosylated GP-C ectodomain is
5.9 x 104Å3. The estimated volume of the GP-C ectodomain is therefore consistent with four to six nonglycosylated GP-C monomers (Table 1).
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Feature identification
|
50-Å punctate densities, while no regularly occurring features were visible in vesicle and ice control class averages. Computed diffraction patterns of the arenavirus averages displayed reflections not seen in the transform of the background ice average (data not shown). This suggested that the GP-C and/or the underlying NP molecules were packed in a paracrystalline fashion. En face images of single virions (Fig. 5A to D, insets) showed similar punctate densities, and computed diffraction patterns showed discrete sampling (Fig. 5A to D). To further delineate this apparent lattice, diffraction patterns were computed for groups of 3,000 to 10,000 images of Pic, Tac, LCM, and LiCl-treated LCM that had been aligned to a reference-free class average (Fig. 5E to H). Reflections that corresponded to a lattice with a = 74 ± 5 Å, b = 57 ± 4 Å, and
= 76 ± 3° were consistently observed (Fig. 5I). Image analysis of LiCl-treated or acid- and NaCl-treated LCM virions yielded an identical lattice (Fig. 5D and H). Since these virions lack GP-C spikes, the lattice in these virions must arise from one of the other structural proteins, such as Z or NP. The sizes of the roughly circular densities in the averaged images ranged from 48 to 56 Å, which is comparable to the IT-2 densities in side views of Pic, Tac, and LCM (Fig. 4A, C, E, F, and G).
![]() View larger version (67K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. Paracrystalline lattice of NP revealed by analysis of en face images. Computed diffraction patterns of class averages (large images) were constructed for en face views from Pic (A and E), Tac (B and F), LCM (C and G), and LiCl-treated LCM (D and H). Images were analyzed individually (large images A to D), or raw images were aligned to class averages, Fourier transformed, and averaged in real space to produce composite images (large images E to H). The dimensions of the paracrystalline lattice are shown in panel I.
|
The IT-1 density is assigned to protein Z. Side views showed that the IT-1 densities were much smaller than the IT-2 densities, with an average height of 27 ± 2 Å (n = 18), width of 43 ± 5 Å (n = 30), and center-to-center spacing of 90 ± 7 Å (n = 33). Split or uniform IT-1 densities were located beneath each GP-C protrusion in class averages (Fig. 4A to C and data not shown). Candidates for the IT-1 density include the cytoplasmic tail of GP-2 and Z or contributions of both. Initial characterization of the topology of the hydrophobic GP-C-signal protein in the endoplasmic reticulum (13) appears to exclude the signal protein from consideration for IT-1. The posttransmembrane carboxyl-terminal tail of GP-2 is relatively short, between 42 and 46 amino acid residues. Thus, the main contribution to the IT-1 density is likely to be the remaining high-copy structural protein, Z. The Z protein contains no canonical hydrophobic transmembrane regions but has been shown to be tightly associated with membranes (43) and the virion core (40) and is also myristoylated. These features support a membrane-proximal location of Z (Fig. 3). The central density of IT-1 was a reasonable volume match for two copies of Z, although it was difficult to measure the dimensions of IT-1 and the poorly resolved connecting densities.
|
|
|---|
NP packing may regulate virion size.
The fairly discrete diameters observed for arenavirus particles (Fig. 2G) may be related to the number of packaged NP molecules. The average difference in diameter between adjacent size classes was
130 Å, the average length of a side of the parallelogram occupied by four adjacent NP molecules (148 by 114 Å in Fig. 4E). Arenavirus size classes may be generated by the addition or removal of a ring of units containing four NP molecules to make each subsequent overrepresented virion diameter. The average virions of the four main classes contain roughly 60, 120, 180, and 240 units of four NP molecules in the IT-2 grid. Although it is clear that arenaviruses do not manifest icosahedral symmetry, the two major size classes, which contain 44 to 55% of all virions, possess the approximate number of units expected for T = 3 and T = 4 icosahedral capsids, respectively. We have been unable to routinely identify fivefold axes characteristic of icosahedral symmetry in arenavirus virion images and class averages (data not shown). Furthermore, arenaviruses are far larger than known T = 3 or T = 4 icosahedral virions. The nonicosahedral packing of NP molecules in the arenaviruses appears to be analogous to the paracrystalline but nonicosahedral packing of Gag molecules in retrovirus virions (18, 48).
Parallels to the design of other viruses.
Arenavirus particles display two concentric layers of protein beneath the lipid bilayer, the innermost of which contains punctate 50-Å densities that we attribute to NP. Arenaviruses resemble enveloped icosahedral and pleomorphic particles in the general arrangement of inner and outer protein features. However, the supramolecular design of arenaviruses differs from known virus architectures: alphaviruses, like flaviviruses, have an icosahedral geometry with defined two-, three-, and fivefold axes, and retroviruses have local paracrystalline symmetry with visible seams located where paracrystalline arrays abut. We have not detected a spiral or helical arrangement of irregularly coiled NP filaments, as observed after release of nucleocapsids from a variety of pleomorphic viruses. Spiral nucleoproteins have been described previously for released arenavirus nucleocapsids (11, 49). It is possible that IT-2 NP molecules reflect local approaches of the spiral nucleocapsid to the membrane, although the data presented here do not address NP packing inside IT-2. The proposed concentric density distribution is consistent with more recent cryo-EM analyses of influenza virus virions (1, 17) and immature retrovirus particles (18, 47, 48) (Fig. 6). Our density assignments are consistent with the reported L/NP/GP-1/GP-2/Z molar ratio of Lassa virus of
1:160:60:60:20 (43).
![]() View larger version (27K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. (A) Schematic representation of the arenavirus and murine leukemia virus organization (based on reference 48 used with permission of the National Academy of Sciences). The murine leukemia virus Gag domains matrix (MA), P12, capsid (CA), and nucleocapsid (NC) are shown assembled at the viral lipid bilayer (LB) on the left, while the arenavirus GP, Z, and NP proteins are depicted on the right. (B) Schematic representation of clathrin-coated vesicle organization, showing the position of the "cargo" protein, adaptor protein complex (AP), and clathrin coat (CLA). Bar, 100 Å.
|
30 Å of the inner surface of the membrane (18, 47, 48). Gag cleavage products, the matrix proteins of negative-stranded viruses, and arenavirus Z proteins contain the late domains that bind adaptor components of the coatomer assembly machinery and are essential for viral budding. The late domains of retroviruses often occur as either the sequence P-P-X-Y or P-S/T-A-P (where X is any amino acid) between MA and CA or as a Y-X-X-
(where
is an amino acid with a bulky hydrophobic side chain) sequence in the domain following NC. Each allows the virus protein to bind a different component of the host cell vacuolar protein sorting pathway (33). The arenavirus Z protein contains either one or two functional motifs of the P-P-X-Y and P-S/T-A-P type or, in the case of Tac Z, a single Y-X-X-
motif (37, 43). It may be significant that Tac NP is located
30 Å distal from the membrane relative to the New and Old World arenavirus counterparts Pic and LCM and that Tac presumably interacts with different parts of the coatomer assembly pathway. Late domains in Z are also required for budding but not for association of Z with membranes or for the interaction of Z and NP (15, 37, 43). Furthermore, Z proteins of LCM and Lassa viruses can substitute functionally for the Rous sarcoma virus late domains (37). Thus, analogous virus designs are realized differently: retroviral Gag proteins are processed in place during maturation, while arenaviruses are assembled as mature particles from discrete components. Parallels to vesicular transport. The primary function of a virion is to enable transport of the virus genome between host cells. In fulfilling this function, the arenaviruses possess a basic structural similarity to the coatomer-coated vesicle assembly (for a review see reference 29). Arenaviruses and coatomer-coated transport vesicles are assembled at cellular membranes from discrete components; arenaviruses form convex assemblies that bud outward from the plasma membrane, while transport vesicles form concave assemblies that eventually bud inward. Arenaviruses and other viruses that require late domains for assembly utilize components of the coatomer assembly complexes. GP oligomers are analogous to the coatomer-transported cargo proteins (Fig. 6B), adaptor protein-binding Z protein is analogous to the plate-like coatomer adaptor proteins, and a paracrystalline net of NP is analogous to the clathrin lattice in assembled vesicles (42). The respective cargos are carried at opposite ends of the complex. Thus, arenaviruses, retroviruses, and cellular coatomer complexes appear to utilize complementary processes for transport across membranes.
This work was supported through NIH grants RO1 AI-39848 (to M.J.B.), RO1 AI-50840 (to M.J.B.), and GM-066087 (to M.Y.). B.W.N. and B.D.A. were supported by NIH training grants NS-41219 and AI-07354, respectively. During this work M.Y. was also supported by a Clinical Scientist Award in Translational Research from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund.
This is TSRI manuscript 16374-NP. ![]()
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»