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Identification and structural characterization of a high-affinity nucleocapsid protein binding site within the Moloney murine leukemia virus Psi-RNA packaging signal: Implications for genome recognition

Posted on:2003-10-06Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Maryland Baltimore CountyCandidate:D'Souza, Victoria ManuelFull Text:PDF
GTID:1463390011480838Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
Murine Leukemia Virus (MLV) is currently the most widely used gene delivery system in gene therapy trials. The simple retrovirus packages two copies of its RNA genome by a mechanism that involves interactions between the nucleocapsid (NC) domain of a virally-encoded Gag polyprotein and a segment of the RNA genome located just upstream of the Gag initiation codon, known as the Ψ-site. Previous studies indicated that the MLV Ψ-site contains three stem-loops (SLB-SLD), and that stem loops SLC and SLD play prominent roles in packaging. We have developed a method for the preparation and purification of large quantities of recombinant Moloney MLV NC protein, and have studied its interactions with a series of oligoribonucleotides that contain one or more of the Ψ-RNA stem loops. At RNA concentrations above ∼0.3 mM, isolated stem loop SLB forms a duplex and stem loops SL-C and SL-D form kissing complexes, as expected from previous studies. However, neither the monomeric nor the dimeric forms of these isolated stem loops binds NC with significant affinity (Kd > 0.5 mM). Longer constructs containing two stem loops (SL-BC and SL-CD) also exhibit low affinities for NC. However, NC binds with high affinity and stoichiometrically to both the monomeric and dimeric forms of an RNA construct that contains all three stem loops (SL-BCD; Kd = 132 ± 55 nM). Titration of SL-BCD with NC also shifts monomer-dimer equilibrium toward the dimer. Mutagenesis experiments demonstrate that the conserved GACG tetraloops of stem loops C and D do not influence the monomer-dimer equilibrium of SL-BCD, that the tetraloop of stem loop B does not participate directly in NC binding, and that the tetraloops of stem loops C and D probably also do not bind to NC. These surprising results differ considerably from those observed for HIV-1, where NC binds to individual stem loops with high affinity via interactions with exposed residues of the tetraloops. The present results indicate that MLV NC binds to a pocket or surface that only exists in the presence of all three stem loops. Preliminary NMR studies on the monomeric form of SL-BCD, however, show that the three stem loops do not interact with each other in absence of NC and that the interface needed for binding is formed by the required orientation of the three stem loops only in the presence of NC.
Keywords/Search Tags:Stem, RNA, Binding, MLV, NC binds, Genome, Affinity, SL-BCD
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