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Application of Virus-Like Particles (VLP) to NMR Characterization of Viral Membrane Protein Interactions

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posted on 2017-04-09, 00:00 authored by M. Caffrey, L.J. Rong, T.L. Bowlin, A. Basu, C. Kingsley, Aleksandar M. Antanasijevic
The membrane proteins of viruses play critical roles in the virus life cycle and are attractive targets for therapeutic intervention. Virus-like particles (VLP) present the possibility to study the biochemical and biophysical properties of viral membrane proteins in their native environment. Specifically, the VLP constructs contain the entire protein sequence and are comprised of native membrane components including lipids, cholesterol, carbohydrates and cellular proteins. In this study we prepare VLP containing full-length hemagglutinin (HA) or neuraminidase (NA) from influenza and characterize their interactions with small molecule inhibitors. Using HA-VLP, we first show that VLP samples prepared using the standard sucrose gradient purification scheme contain significant amounts of serum proteins, which exhibit high potential for non-specific interactions, thereby complicating NMR studies of ligand-target interactions. We then show that the serum contaminants may be largely removed with the addition of a gel filtration chromatography step. Next, using HA-VLP we demonstrate that WaterLOGSY NMR is significantly more sensitive than Saturation Transfer Difference (STD) NMR for the study of ligand interactions with membrane bound targets. In addition, we compare the ligand orientation to HA embedded in VLP with that of recombinant HA by STD NMR. In a subsequent step, using NA-VLP we characterize the kinetic and binding properties of substrate analogs and inhibitors of NA, including study of the H274Y-NA mutant, which leads to wide spread resistance to current influenza antivirals. In summary, our work suggests that VLP have high potential to become standard tools in biochemical and biophysical studies of viral membrane proteins, particularly when VLP are highly purified and combined with control VLP containing native membrane proteins.

Funding

HHS/NIH grants 1R21AI101676 and 5R44AI072861 and the Chicago Biomedical Consortium with support from the Searle Funds at the Chicago Community Trust.

History

Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. The final publication is available at springerlink.com; DOI: 10.1007/s10858-016-0025-1.

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Language

  • en_US

issn

0925-2738

Issue date

2016-03-01

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