Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Malet H., Coutard B., Jamal S., Dutartre H., Papageorgiou N., Neuvonen M., Ahola T., Forrester N., Gould E. A., Lafitte D., Ferron F., Lescar J., Gorbalenya A. E., de Lamballerie Xavier, Canard B. (2009). The crystal structures of Chikungunya and Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus nsP3 macro domains define a conserved adenosine binding pocket. Journal of Virology, 83 (13), p. 6534-6545. ISSN 0022-538X.

Titre du document
The crystal structures of Chikungunya and Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus nsP3 macro domains define a conserved adenosine binding pocket
Année de publication
2009
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000267354100021
Auteurs
Malet H., Coutard B., Jamal S., Dutartre H., Papageorgiou N., Neuvonen M., Ahola T., Forrester N., Gould E. A., Lafitte D., Ferron F., Lescar J., Gorbalenya A. E., de Lamballerie Xavier, Canard B.
Source
Journal of Virology, 2009, 83 (13), p. 6534-6545 ISSN 0022-538X
Macro domains (also called "X domains") constitute a protein module family present in all kingdoms of life, including viruses of the Coronaviridae and Togaviridae families. Crystal structures of the macro domain from the Chikungunya virus (an "Old World" alphavirus) and the Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (a "New World" alphavirus) were determined at resolutions of 1.65 and 2.30 angstrom, respectively. These domains are active as adenosine di-phosphoribose 1 '-phosphate phosphatases. Both the Chikungunya and the Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus macro domains are ADP-ribose binding modules, as revealed by structural and functional analysis. A single aspartic acid conserved through all macro domains is responsible for the specific binding of the adenine base. Sequence-unspecific binding to long, negatively charged polymers such as poly(ADP-ribose), DNA, and RNA is observed and attributed to positively charged patches outside of the active site pocket, as judged by mutagenesis and binding studies. The crystal structure of the Chikungunya virus macro domain with an RNA trimer shows a binding mode utilizing the same adenine-binding pocket as ADP-ribose, but avoiding the ADP-ribose 1 '-phosphate phosphatase active site. This leaves the AMP binding site as the sole common feature in all macro domains.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010046165]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010046165
Contact