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2IUM

Structure of the C-terminal head domain of the avian adenovirus CELO long fibre (C2 crystal form)

Summary for 2IUM
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb2ium/pdb
Related2IUN
DescriptorAVIAN ADENOVIRUS CELO LONG FIBRE (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsreceptor-binding, avian adenovirus, trimeric proteins, viral fibres, beta-sandwich, fiber protein, viral protein
Biological sourceAVIAN ADENOVIRUS GAL1 (FOWL ADENOVIRUS 1, AVIAN ADENOVIRUS CELO)
Total number of polymer chains3
Total formula weight79459.99
Authors
Guardado-Calvo, P.,Llamas-Saiz, A.L.,Fox, G.C.,van Raaij, M.J. (deposition date: 2006-06-06, release date: 2007-06-19, Last modification date: 2024-05-08)
Primary citationGuardado-Calvo, P.,Llamas-Saiz, A.L.,Fox, G.C.,Langlois, P.,van Raaij, M.J.
Structure of the C-terminal head domain of the fowl adenovirus type 1 long fiber.
J. Gen. Virol., 88:2407-2416, 2007
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Avian adenovirus CELO (chicken embryo lethal orphan virus, fowl adenovirus type 1) incorporates two different homotrimeric fiber proteins extending from the same penton base: a long fiber (designated fiber 1) and a short fiber (designated fiber 2). The short fibers extend straight outwards from the viral vertices, whilst the long fibers emerge at an angle. In contrast to the short fiber, which binds an unknown avian receptor and has been shown to be essential to the invasiveness of this virus, the long fiber appears to be unnecessary for infection in birds. Both fibers contain a short N-terminal virus-binding peptide, a slender shaft domain and a globular C-terminal head domain; the head domain, by analogy with human adenoviruses, is likely to be involved mainly in receptor binding. This study reports the high-resolution crystal structure of the head domain of the long fiber, solved using single isomorphous replacement (using anomalous signal) and refined against data at 1.6 A (0.16 nm) resolution. The C-terminal globular head domain had an anti-parallel beta-sandwich fold formed by two four-stranded beta-sheets with the same overall topology as human adenovirus fiber heads. The presence in the sequence of characteristic repeats N-terminal to the head domain suggests that the shaft domain contains a triple beta-spiral structure. Implications of the structure for the function and stability of the avian adenovirus long fiber protein are discussed; notably, the structure suggests a different mode of binding to the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor from that proposed for the human adenovirus fiber heads.
PubMed: 17698649
DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.82845-0
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.6 Å)
Structure validation

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