๐ Structures of the N- and C-terminal domains of MHV-A59 nucleocapsid protein corroborate a conserved RNA-protein binding mechanism in coronavirus
Coronaviruses are the causative agent of respiratory and enteric diseases in animals and humans. One example is SARS, which caused a worldwide health threat in 2003. In coronaviruses, the structural protein N (nucleocapsid protein) associates with the viral RNA to form the filamentous nucleocapsid and plays a crucial role in genome replication and transcription. The structure of Nterminal domain of MHV N protein also implicated its specific affinity with transcriptional regulatory sequence (TRS) RNA. Here we report the crystal structures of the two proteolytically resistant N- (NTD) and C-terminal (CTD) domains of the N protein from murine hepatitis virus (MHV). The structure of NTD in two different crystal forms was solved to 1.5 ร
. The higher resolution provides more detailed structural information than previous reports, showing that the NTD structure from MHV shares a similar overall and topology structure with that of SARS-CoV and IBV, but varies in its potential surface, which indicates a possible difference in RNA-binding module. The structure of CTD was solved to 2.0-ร
resolution and revealed a tightly intertwined dimer. This is consistent with analytical ultracentrifugation experiments, suggesting a dimeric assembly of the N protein. The similarity between the structures of these two domains from SARS-CoV, IBV and MHV corroborates a conserved mechanism of nucleocapsid formation for coronaviruses. ยฉ 2010 Higher Education Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
keywords
๐ causative agent (117)
๐ hepatitis virus (437)
๐ murine hepatitis (71)
๐ nucleocapsid protein (162)
๐ crystal structure (114)
author
๐ค Ma, Yanlin
๐ค Tong, Xiaohang
๐ค Xu, Xiaoling
๐ค Li, Xuemei
๐ค Lou, Zhiyong
๐ค Rao, Zihe
year
โฐ 2010
journal
๐ Protein and Cell
issn
๐ 16748018 1674800X
volume
1
number
7
page
688-697
citedbycount
24
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