| Physical Regulation of the Self-Assembly of Tobacco Mosaic Virus Coat Protein Biophysical Journal, Volume 91, Issue 4, 15 August 2006, Pages 1501-1512 Willem K. Kegel and Paul van der Schoot Abstract We present a statistical mechanical model based on the principle of mass action that explains the main features of the in vitro aggregation behavior of the coat protein of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). By comparing our model to experimentally obtained stability diagrams, titration experiments, and calorimetric data, we pin down three competing factors that regulate the transitions between the different kinds of aggregated state of the coat protein. These are hydrophobic interactions, electrostatic interactions, and the formation of so-called “Caspar” carboxylate pairs. We suggest that these factors could be universal and relevant to a large class of virus coat proteins. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (192 kb) |
| Self-Assembly of a Viral Molecular Machine from Purified Protein and RNA Constituents Molecular Cell, Volume 7, Issue 4, 1 April 2001, Pages 845-854 Minna M Poranen, Anja O Paatero, Roman Tuma and Dennis H Bamford Summary We present the assembly of the polymerase complex (procapsid) of a dsRNA virus from purified recombinant proteins. This molecular machine packages and replicates viral ssRNA genomic precursors in vitro. After addition of an external protein shell, these in vitro self-assembled viral core particles can penetrate the host plasma membrane and initiate a productive infection. Thus, a viral procapsid has been assembled and rendered infectious using purified components. Using this system, we have studied the mechanism of assembly of the common dsRNA virus shell and the incorporation of a symmetry mismatch within an icosahedral capsid. Our work demonstrates that this molecular machine, self-assembled under defined conditions in vitro, can function in its natural environment, the cell cytoplasm. Summary | Full Text | PDF (384 kb) |
| Historical importance of TMV Trends in Plant Science, Volume 5, Issue 6, 1 June 2000, Pages 268 Ulrich Melcher Full Text | PDF (128 kb) |
Copyright © 1980 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 32, Issue 1, 313-329, 1 October 1980
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(80)84959-9
Research Article
T.M. Schuster, R.B. Scheele, M.L. Adams, S.J. Shire, J.J. Steckert and M. Potschka
Sedimentation and proton binding studies on the endothermic self-association of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) protein indicate that the so-called "20S" sedimenting protein is an interaction system involving at least the 34-subunit two-turn yield cylindrical disk aggregate and the 49-subunit three-turn helical rod. The pH dependence of this overall equilibrium suggests that disk formation is proton-linked through the binding of protons to the two-turn helix which is not present as significant concentrations near pH 7. There is a temperature-induced intramolecular conformation change in the protein leading to a difference spectrum which is complete in 5 x 10(-6) s at pH 7 and 20 degrees C and is dominated at 300 nm by tryptophan residues. Kinetics measurements of protein polymerization, from 10(-6) to 10(3) s, reveal three relaxation processes at pH 7.0, 20 degrees C, 0.10 M ionic strength K (H) PO4. The fastest relaxation time is a few milliseconds and represents reactions within the 4S protein distribution. The second fastest relaxation is 50–100 x 10(-3) s and represents elementary polymerization steps involved in the formation of the approximately 20 S protein. Analysis of the slowest relaxation, approximately 5 x 10(4) s, suggests that this very slow formation of approximately 20 S protein may be dominated by some first order process in the overall dissociation of approximately 20S protein. Sedimentation measurements of the rate of TMV reconstitution, under the same conditions, show by direct measurements of 4S and approximately 20S incorporation at various 4S to approximately 20S weight ratios that the relative rate of approximately 20S incorporation decreases almost linearly, from 0 to 50% 4S. There appears to be one or more regions of TMV-RNA, approximately 1–1.5 kilobases long, which incorporates approximately 20S protein exclusively. Solutions of approximately 95–100% approximately 20S protein have been prepared for the first time and used for reconstitution with RNA. Such protein solutions yield full size TMV, but at a slower rate than if 4S protein is added. Thus the elongation reaction in TMV assembly, following nucleation with approximately 20S protein, is not exclusively dependent upon the presence of either 4S or approximately 20S protein aggregates. The initial, maximum, rate of reconstitution increases about threefold when the protein composition is changed from 5% to 30% 4S protein, at constant total protein concentration at pH 7.0, 20 degrees C in 0.10 M ionic strength K (H)PO4. The probable binding frame at the internal assembly nucleation site of TMV-RNA has been determined by measuring the association constants for the binding of various trinucleoside diphosphates to helical TMV protein rods. The -CAG-AAG-AAG-sequence at the nucleation site is capable of providing at least 10–14 kcal/mol of sites of binding free energy for the nucleation event in TMV self-assembly.