Near-atomic structure of an atadenovirus reveals a conserved capsid-binding motif and intergenera variations in cementing proteins
Entity
UAM. Departamento de Ingeniería InformáticaPublisher
American Association for the Advancement of ScienceDate
2021-03-31Citation
10.1126/sciadv.abe6008
Science Advances 7.14 (2021):eabe6008
ISSN
2375-2548 (online)DOI
10.1126/sciadv.abe6008Funded by
This work is supported by the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación and European Regional Development Fund (BFU2016-74868-P and PID2019-104098GB-I00/AEI/10.13039/501100011033), the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad of Spain (BFU2013-41249-P and BIO2015-68990-REDT), and the Agencia Estatal CSIC (2019AEP045). The CNB-CSIC is further supported by a Severo Ochoa Excellence grant (SEV 2017-0712). M.K. was supported by the Emergence(s) program from City of Paris (grant MEMREMA)Project
Gobierno de España. BFU2016-74868-P; Gobierno de España. PID2019-104098GB-I00; Gobierno de España. BFU2013-41249-P; Gobierno de España. BIO2015-68990-REDTEditor's Version
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abe6008Subjects
InformáticaRights
© The author(s)Abstract
Of five known adenovirus genera, high-resolution structures are available only for mammalian-infecting mastadenoviruses. We present the first high-resolution structure of an adenovirus with nonmammalian host: lizard atadenovirus LAdV-2. We find a large conformational difference in the internal vertex protein IIIa between mast- and atadenoviruses, induced by the presence of an extended polypeptide. This polypeptide, and α-helical clusters beneath the facet, likely correspond to genus-specific proteins LH2 and p32k. Another genus-specific protein, LH3, with a fold typical of bacteriophage tailspikes, contacts the capsid surface via a triskelion structure identical to that used by mastadenovirus protein IX, revealing a conserved capsid-binding motif and an ancient gene duplication event. Our data also suggest that mastadenovirus E1B-55 K was exapted from the atadenovirus-like LH3 protein. This work provides new information on the evolution of adenoviruses, emphasizing the importance of minor coat proteins for determining specific physicochemical properties of virions and most likely their tropism
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Google Scholar:Marabini Ruiz, Roberto
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Condezo, Gabriela N.
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Krupovic, Mart
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Menéndez-Conejero, Rosa
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Gómez-Blanco, Josué
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Martín, Carmen San
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