Recently, a novel 87-amino acid influenza A virus protein with proapoptotic properties, PB1-F2, has been reported that originates from an alternative reading frame in the PB1 polymerase gene and is encoded in most known human influenza A virus isolates. Here we characterize the molecular structure of a biologically active synthetic version of the protein (sPB1-F2). Western blot analysis, chemical cross-linking, and NMR spectroscopy afforded direct evidence of the inherent tendency of sPB1-F2 to undergo oligomerization mediated by two distinct domains located in the N and C termini, respectively. CD and 1H NMR spectroscopic analyses indicate that the stability of structured regions in the molecule clearly depends upon the hydrophobicity of the solvent. In aqueous solutions, the behavior of sPB1-F2 is typical of a largely random coil peptide that, however, adopts α-helical structure upon the addition of membrane mimetics. 1H NMR analysis of three overlapping peptides afforded, for the first time, direct experimental evidence of the presence of a C-terminal region with strong α-helical propensity comprising amino acid residues Ile55-Lys85 connected via an essentially random coil structure to a much weaker helix-like region, located in the N terminus between residues Trp9 and Lys20. The C-terminal helix is not a true amphipathic helix and is more compact than previously predicted. It corresponds to a positively charged region previously shown to include the mitochondrial targeting sequence of PB1-F2. The consequences of the strong oligomerization and helical propensities of the molecule are discussed and used to formulate a hypothetical model of its interaction with the mitochondrial membrane. © 2007 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Bruns, K., Studtrucker, N., Sharma, A., Fossen, T., Mitzner, D., Eissmann, A., … Schubert, U. (2007). Structural characterization and oligomerization of PB1-F2, a proapoptotic influenza A virus protein. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282(1), 353–363. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M606494200
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