The T=1 Capsid Protein of Penicillium chrysogenum Virus Is Formed by a Repeated Helix-Rich Core Indicative of Gene Duplication▿ †
- Daniel Luque1,
- José M. González1,
- Damiá Garriga2,
- Said A. Ghabrial3,
- Wendy M. Havens3,
- Benes Trus4,
- Nuria Verdaguer2,
- José L. Carrascosa1 and
- José R. Castón1,*
- 1Department of Structure of Macromolecules, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología/CSIC, Campus Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain
- 2Institut de Biologia Molecular de Barcelona/CSIC, Parc Científic de Barcelona, Baldiri i Reixac 15, 08028 Barcelona, Spain
- 3Department of Plant Pathology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40546
- 4Imaging Sciences Laboratory, CIT/NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-5624
ABSTRACT
Penicillium chrysogenum virus (PcV), a member of the Chrysoviridae family, is a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) fungal virus with a multipartite genome, with each RNA molecule encapsidated in a separate particle. Chrysoviruses lack an extracellular route and are transmitted during sporogenesis and cell fusion. The PcV capsid, based on a T=1 lattice containing 60 subunits of the 982-amino-acid capsid protein, remains structurally undisturbed throughout the viral cycle, participates in genome metabolism, and isolates the virus genome from host defense mechanisms. Using three-dimensional cryoelectron microscopy, we determined the structure of the PcV virion at 8.0 Å resolution. The capsid protein has a high content of rod-like densities characteristic of α-helices, forming a repeated α-helical core indicative of gene duplication. Whereas the PcV capsid protein has two motifs with the same fold, most dsRNA virus capsid subunits consist of dimers of a single protein with similar folds. The spatial arrangement of the α-helical core resembles that found in the capsid protein of the L-A virus, a fungal totivirus with an undivided genome, suggesting a conserved basic fold. The encapsidated genome is organized in concentric shells; whereas the inner dsRNA shells are well defined, the outermost layer is dense due to numerous interactions with the inner capsid surface, specifically, six interacting areas per monomer. The outermost genome layer is arranged in an icosahedral cage, sufficiently well ordered to allow for modeling of an A-form dsRNA. The genome ordering might constitute a framework for dsRNA transcription at the capsid interior and/or have a structural role for capsid stability.
FOOTNOTES
- Received 26 February 2010.
- Accepted 5 May 2010.
- ↵*Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departamento de Estructura de Macromoléculas, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología/CSIC, Darwin 3, Cantoblanco, E-28049 Madrid, Spain. Phone: 34-91-5854971. Fax: 34-91-5854506. E-mail: jrcaston{at}cnb.csic.es
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↵▿ Published ahead of print on 12 May 2010.
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↵† Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jvi.asm.org/.
- American Society for Microbiology











