[HTML][HTML] Structure of dengue virus: implications for flavivirus organization, maturation, and fusion

RJ Kuhn, W Zhang, MG Rossmann, SV Pletnev… - Cell, 2002 - cell.com
RJ Kuhn, W Zhang, MG Rossmann, SV Pletnev, J Corver, E Lenches, CT Jones…
Cell, 2002cell.com
The first structure of a flavivirus has been determined by using a combination of cryoelectron
microscopy and fitting of the known structure of glycoprotein E into the electron density map.
The virus core, within a lipid bilayer, has a less-ordered structure than the external,
icosahedral scaffold of 90 glycoprotein E dimers. The three E monomers per icosahedral
asymmetric unit do not have quasiequivalent symmetric environments. Difference maps
indicate the location of the small membrane protein M relative to the overlaying scaffold of E …
Abstract
The first structure of a flavivirus has been determined by using a combination of cryoelectron microscopy and fitting of the known structure of glycoprotein E into the electron density map. The virus core, within a lipid bilayer, has a less-ordered structure than the external, icosahedral scaffold of 90 glycoprotein E dimers. The three E monomers per icosahedral asymmetric unit do not have quasiequivalent symmetric environments. Difference maps indicate the location of the small membrane protein M relative to the overlaying scaffold of E dimers. The structure suggests that flaviviruses, and by analogy also alphaviruses, employ a fusion mechanism in which the distal β barrels of domain II of the glycoprotein E are inserted into the cellular membrane.
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