Walters Robert W, Agbandje-McKenna Mavis, Bowman Valorie D, Moninger Thomas O, Olson Norman H, Seiler Michael, Chiorini John A, Baker Timothy S, Zabner Joseph
Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA.
J Virol. 2004 Apr;78(7):3361-71. doi: 10.1128/jvi.78.7.3361-3371.2004.
Adeno-associated virus serotype 5 (AAV5) requires sialic acid on host cells to bind and infect. Other parvoviruses, including Aleutian mink disease parvovirus (ADV), canine parvovirus (CPV), minute virus of mice, and bovine parvovirus, also bind sialic acid. Hence, structural homology may explain this functional homology. The amino acids required for CPV sialic acid binding map to a site at the icosahedral twofold axes of the capsid. In contrast to AAV5, AAV2 does not bind sialic acid, but rather binds heparan sulfate proteoglycans at its threefold axes of symmetry. To explore the structure-function relationships among parvoviruses with respect to cell receptor attachment, we determined the structure of AAV5 by cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and image reconstruction at a resolution of 16 A. Surface features common to some parvoviruses, namely depressions encircling the fivefold axes and protrusions at or surrounding the threefold axes, are preserved in the AAV5 capsid. However, even though there were some similarities, a comparison of the AAV5 structure with those of ADV and CPV failed to reveal a feature which could account for the sialic acid binding phenotype common to all three viruses. In contrast, the overall surface topologies of AAV5 and AAV2 are similar. A pseudo-atomic model generated for AAV5 based on the crystal structure of AAV2 and constrained by the AAV5 cryo-EM envelope revealed differences only in surface loop regions. Surprisingly, the surface topologies of AAV5 and AAV2 are remarkably similar to that of ADV despite only exhibiting approximately 20% identity in amino acid sequences. Thus, capsid surface features are shared among parvoviruses and may not be unique to their replication phenotypes, i.e., whether they require a helper or are autonomous. Furthermore, specific surface features alone do not explain the variability in carbohydrate requirements for host cell receptor interactions among parvoviruses.
5型腺相关病毒(AAV5)需要宿主细胞上的唾液酸来结合并感染。其他细小病毒,包括阿留申水貂病细小病毒(ADV)、犬细小病毒(CPV)、小鼠微小病毒和牛细小病毒,也结合唾液酸。因此,结构同源性可能解释这种功能同源性。CPV结合唾液酸所需的氨基酸定位在衣壳二十面体二重轴的一个位点上。与AAV5不同,AAV2不结合唾液酸,而是在其三重对称轴处结合硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖。为了探究细小病毒在细胞受体附着方面的结构 - 功能关系,我们通过冷冻电子显微镜(cryo - EM)和图像重建以16埃的分辨率确定了AAV5的结构。一些细小病毒共有的表面特征,即在五重轴周围的凹陷和三重轴处或其周围的突起,在AAV5衣壳中得以保留。然而,尽管存在一些相似性,但将AAV5的结构与ADV和CPV的结构进行比较,未能揭示出一个可以解释这三种病毒共有的唾液酸结合表型的特征。相比之下,AAV5和AAV2的整体表面拓扑结构相似。基于AAV2的晶体结构并受AAV5冷冻电镜包膜约束生成的AAV5伪原子模型仅在表面环区显示出差异。令人惊讶的是,尽管AAV5和AAV2在氨基酸序列中仅表现出约20%的同一性,但它们的表面拓扑结构与ADV非常相似。因此,衣壳表面特征在细小病毒之间是共享的,可能并非其复制表型(即它们是否需要辅助病毒或是否自主复制)所特有。此外,仅特定的表面特征并不能解释细小病毒在宿主细胞受体相互作用的碳水化合物需求方面的变异性。