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Maturation of the HIV-1 core by a non-diffusional phase transition

Authors :
Lisa M. Hartnell
Lesley A. Earl
Xiongwu Wu
Gregory Q. Del Prete
Gabriel A. Frank
Jeffrey D. Lifson
Amy Moran
Sriram Subramaniam
Kedar Narayan
Julian W. Bess
Source :
Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Nature Pub. Group, 2015.

Abstract

The formation of the HIV-1 core is the final step in the viral maturation pathway, resulting in the formation of infectious virus. Most current models for HIV-1 core formation suggest that, upon proteolytic cleavage from the immature Gag, capsid (CA) dissociates into the viral interior before reforming into the core. Here we present evidence for an alternate view of core formation by taking advantage of our serendipitous observation of large membrane-enclosed structures in HIV-1 supernatants from infected cells. Cryo-electron tomographic studies show that these structures, which contain ordered arrays of what is likely the membrane-associated matrix protein, contain multiple cores that can be captured at different stages of maturation. Our studies suggest that HIV maturation involves a non-diffusional phase transition in which the detaching layer of the cleaved CA lattice is gradually converted into a roll that ultimately forms the surface of the mature conical core.<br />Current models of HIV maturation involve the diffusion of the cleaved capsid protein into the viral core. Here, Frank et al. use cryo-electron tomography to characterize HIV assembly intermediates, and propose a novel maturation mechanism involving a non-diffusional phase transition.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e26386e6e912984634153f47025645a7