Structural Changes in Dengue Virus When Exposed to a Temperature of 37°C

  • Fibriansah G
  • Ng T
  • Kostyuchenko V
  • et al.
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Abstract

Previous binding studies of antibodies that recognized a partially or fully hidden epitope suggest that insect cell-derived dengue virus undergoes structural changes at an elevated temperature. This was confirmed by our cryo-electron microscopy images of dengue virus incubated at 37°C, where viruses change their surface from smooth to rough. Here we present the cryo-electron microscopy structures of dengue virus at 37°C. Image analysis showed four classes of particles. The three-dimensional (3D) map of one of these classes, representing half of the imaged virus population, shows that the E protein shell has expanded and there is a hole at the 3-fold vertices. Fitting E protein structures into the map suggests that all of the interdimeric and some intradimeric E protein interactions are weakened. The accessibility of some previously found cryptic epitopes on this class of particles is discussed.

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Fibriansah, G., Ng, T.-S., Kostyuchenko, V. A., Lee, J., Lee, S., Wang, J., & Lok, S.-M. (2013). Structural Changes in Dengue Virus When Exposed to a Temperature of 37°C. Journal of Virology, 87(13), 7585–7592. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00757-13

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