Journal: 
Nature Communications
Authors: 
Mingzhang Wang *
Caitlin M. Quinn*
Juan R. Perilla*
Huilan Zhang
Randall Shirra Jr.
Guangjin Hou
In-Ja Byeon
Christopher L. Suiter
Sherimay Ablan
Emiko Urano
Theodore J. Nitz
Christopher Aiken
Eric O. Freed
Peijun Zhang
Klaus Schulten
Angela Gronenborn
Tatyana Polenova
Abstract: 
Maturation of HIV-1 particles encompasses a complex morphological transformation of Gag via an orchestrated series of proteolytic cleavage events. A longstanding question concerns the structure of the C-terminal region of CA and the peptide SP1 (CA–SP1), which represents an intermediate during maturation of the HIV-1 virus. By integrating NMR, cryo-EM, and molecular dynamics simulations, we show that in CA–SP1 tubes assembled in vitro, which represent the features of an intermediate assembly state during maturation, the SP1 peptide Q1 exists in a dynamic helix–coil equilibrium, and that the addition of the maturation inhibitors Bevirimat and DFH-055 causes stabilization of a helical form of SP1. Moreover, the Q2 maturation-arresting SP1 mutation T8I also induces helical structure in SP1 and further global dynamical and conformational changes in CA. Overall, our results show that dynamics of CA and SP1 are critical for orderly HIV-1 maturation and that small molecules can inhibit maturation by perturbing molecular motions.
Date: 
2017
Number: 
8
Pages: 
1779
keywords: 
Virology
Biophysics
Computational Modeling
Structural Biology
cryoEM