Centro de Biología Molecular "Severo Ochoa" (CSIC-UAM), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid , c/Nicolás Cabrera 1, Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain.
ACS Nano. 2017 Feb 28;11(2):2194-2208. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.6b08549. Epub 2017 Jan 27.
Single-molecule experimental techniques and theoretical approaches reveal that important aspects of virus biology can be understood in biomechanical terms at the nanoscale. A detailed knowledge of the relationship in virus capsids between small structural changes caused by single-point mutations and changes in mechanical properties may provide further physics-based insights into virus function; it may also facilitate the engineering of viral nanoparticles with improved mechanical behavior. Here, we used the minute virus of mice to undertake a systematic experimental study on the contribution to capsid stiffness of amino acid side chains at interprotein interfaces and the specific noncovalent interactions they establish. Selected side chains were individually truncated by introducing point mutations to alanine, and the effects on local and global capsid stiffness were determined using atomic force microscopy. The results revealed that, in the natural virus capsid, multiple, mostly hydrophobic, side chains buried along the interfaces between subunits preserve a comparatively low stiffness of most (S2 and S3) regions. Virtually no point mutation tested substantially reduced stiffness, whereas most mutations increased stiffness of the S2/S3 regions. This stiffening was invariably associated with reduced virus yields during cell infection. The experimental evidence suggests that a comparatively low stiffness at S3/S2 capsid regions may have been biologically selected because it facilitates capsid assembly, increasing infectious virus yields. This study demonstrated also that knowledge of individual amino acid side chains and biological pressures that determine the physical behavior of a protein nanoparticle may be used for engineering its mechanical properties.
单分子实验技术和理论方法揭示,在纳米尺度的生物力学水平上,可以理解病毒生物学的许多重要方面。深入了解病毒衣壳中由单点突变引起的微小结构变化与机械性能变化之间的关系,可能会为病毒功能提供进一步基于物理的见解;也可能有助于设计具有改进机械性能的病毒纳米颗粒。在这里,我们使用微小鼠病毒(minute virus of mice),对位于蛋白间界面的氨基酸侧链及其建立的特定非共价相互作用对衣壳刚度的贡献进行了系统的实验研究。通过引入点突变将选定的侧链逐个截断为丙氨酸,使用原子力显微镜确定对局部和全局衣壳刚度的影响。结果表明,在天然病毒衣壳中,沿亚基间界面埋藏的多个(主要是疏水性)侧链保持大多数(S2 和 S3)区域的相对较低的刚度。几乎没有任何测试的点突变会显著降低刚度,而大多数突变会增加 S2/S3 区域的刚度。这种变硬总是与细胞感染期间病毒产量的降低有关。实验证据表明,S3/S2 衣壳区域的相对较低的刚度可能在生物学上被选择,因为它有助于衣壳组装,从而提高感染性病毒的产量。这项研究还表明,可以利用决定蛋白质纳米颗粒物理行为的单个氨基酸侧链和生物压力的知识来设计其机械性能。