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7OD6

Hepatitis B core protein + GSLLGRMKGA

Summary for 7OD6
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb7od6/pdb
Related7OCO 7OCW 7OD4
EMDB information12810 12815 12819 12820
DescriptorCapsid protein, Inhibitory Peptide P2 (GSLLGRMKGA) (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordshepatitis b core protein, virus like particle, inhibitory peptide
Biological sourceHepatitis B virus genotype D subtype ayw (isolate France/Tiollais/1979) (HBV-D)
More
Total number of polymer chains6
Total formula weight87588.55
Authors
Bottcher, B.,Makbul, C. (deposition date: 2021-04-28, release date: 2021-05-26, Last modification date: 2024-07-10)
Primary citationMakbul, C.,Khayenko, V.,Maric, H.M.,Bottcher, B.
Conformational Plasticity of Hepatitis B Core Protein Spikes Promotes Peptide Binding Independent of the Secretion Phenotype.
Microorganisms, 9:-, 2021
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Hepatitis B virus is a major human pathogen, which forms enveloped virus particles. During viral maturation, membrane-bound hepatitis B surface proteins package hepatitis B core protein capsids. This process is intercepted by certain peptides with an "LLGRMKG" motif that binds to the capsids at the tips of dimeric spikes. With microcalorimetry, electron cryo microscopy and peptide microarray-based screens, we have characterized the structural and thermodynamic properties of peptide binding to hepatitis B core protein capsids with different secretion phenotypes. The peptide "GSLLGRMKGA" binds weakly to hepatitis B core protein capsids and mutant capsids with a premature (F97L) or low-secretion phenotype (L60V and P5T). With electron cryo microscopy, we provide novel structures for L60V and P5T and demonstrate that binding occurs at the tips of the spikes at the dimer interface, splaying the helices apart independent of the secretion phenotype. Peptide array screening identifies "SLLGRM" as the core binding motif. This shortened motif binds only to one of the two spikes in the asymmetric unit of the capsid and induces a much smaller conformational change. Altogether, these comprehensive studies suggest that the tips of the spikes act as an autonomous binding platform that is unaffected by mutations that affect secretion phenotypes.
PubMed: 33946808
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9050956
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
ELECTRON MICROSCOPY (3 Å)
Structure validation

226707

건을2024-10-30부터공개중

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