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Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore

Non-enveloped viruses must deliver their viral genome across a cell membrane without the advantage of membrane fusion. The mechanisms used to achieve this remain poorly understood. Human rhinovirus, a frequent cause of the common cold, is a non-enveloped virus of the picornavirus family, which inclu...

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Autores principales: Panjwani, Anusha, Strauss, Mike, Gold, Sarah, Wenham, Hannah, Jackson, Terry, Chou, James J., Rowlands, David J., Stonehouse, Nicola J., Hogle, James M., Tuthill, Tobias J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4125281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25102288
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004294
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author Panjwani, Anusha
Strauss, Mike
Gold, Sarah
Wenham, Hannah
Jackson, Terry
Chou, James J.
Rowlands, David J.
Stonehouse, Nicola J.
Hogle, James M.
Tuthill, Tobias J.
author_facet Panjwani, Anusha
Strauss, Mike
Gold, Sarah
Wenham, Hannah
Jackson, Terry
Chou, James J.
Rowlands, David J.
Stonehouse, Nicola J.
Hogle, James M.
Tuthill, Tobias J.
author_sort Panjwani, Anusha
collection PubMed
description Non-enveloped viruses must deliver their viral genome across a cell membrane without the advantage of membrane fusion. The mechanisms used to achieve this remain poorly understood. Human rhinovirus, a frequent cause of the common cold, is a non-enveloped virus of the picornavirus family, which includes other significant pathogens such as poliovirus and foot-and-mouth disease virus. During picornavirus cell entry, the small myristoylated capsid protein VP4 is released from the virus, interacts with the cell membrane and is implicated in the delivery of the viral RNA genome into the cytoplasm to initiate replication. In this study, we have produced recombinant C-terminal histidine-tagged human rhinovirus VP4 and shown it can induce membrane permeability in liposome model membranes. Dextran size-exclusion studies, chemical crosslinking and electron microscopy demonstrated that VP4 forms a multimeric membrane pore, with a channel size consistent with transfer of the single-stranded RNA genome. The membrane permeability induced by recombinant VP4 was influenced by pH and was comparable to permeability induced by infectious virions. These findings present a molecular mechanism for the involvement of VP4 in cell entry and provide a model system which will facilitate exploration of VP4 as a novel antiviral target for the picornavirus family.
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spelling pubmed-41252812014-08-12 Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore Panjwani, Anusha Strauss, Mike Gold, Sarah Wenham, Hannah Jackson, Terry Chou, James J. Rowlands, David J. Stonehouse, Nicola J. Hogle, James M. Tuthill, Tobias J. PLoS Pathog Research Article Non-enveloped viruses must deliver their viral genome across a cell membrane without the advantage of membrane fusion. The mechanisms used to achieve this remain poorly understood. Human rhinovirus, a frequent cause of the common cold, is a non-enveloped virus of the picornavirus family, which includes other significant pathogens such as poliovirus and foot-and-mouth disease virus. During picornavirus cell entry, the small myristoylated capsid protein VP4 is released from the virus, interacts with the cell membrane and is implicated in the delivery of the viral RNA genome into the cytoplasm to initiate replication. In this study, we have produced recombinant C-terminal histidine-tagged human rhinovirus VP4 and shown it can induce membrane permeability in liposome model membranes. Dextran size-exclusion studies, chemical crosslinking and electron microscopy demonstrated that VP4 forms a multimeric membrane pore, with a channel size consistent with transfer of the single-stranded RNA genome. The membrane permeability induced by recombinant VP4 was influenced by pH and was comparable to permeability induced by infectious virions. These findings present a molecular mechanism for the involvement of VP4 in cell entry and provide a model system which will facilitate exploration of VP4 as a novel antiviral target for the picornavirus family. Public Library of Science 2014-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4125281/ /pubmed/25102288 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004294 Text en © 2014 Panjwani et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Panjwani, Anusha
Strauss, Mike
Gold, Sarah
Wenham, Hannah
Jackson, Terry
Chou, James J.
Rowlands, David J.
Stonehouse, Nicola J.
Hogle, James M.
Tuthill, Tobias J.
Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore
title Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore
title_full Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore
title_fullStr Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore
title_full_unstemmed Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore
title_short Capsid Protein VP4 of Human Rhinovirus Induces Membrane Permeability by the Formation of a Size-Selective Multimeric Pore
title_sort capsid protein vp4 of human rhinovirus induces membrane permeability by the formation of a size-selective multimeric pore
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4125281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25102288
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004294
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