Electrostatic architecture of the Infectious Salmon Anemia Virus (ISAV) core fusion protein illustrates a carboxyl-carboxylate pH sensor

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Abstract

Segment 5, ORF 1 of the infectious salmon anemia virus (ISAV) genome, encodes for the ISAV F protein, which is responsible for viral-host endosomal membrane fusion during a productive ISAV infection. The entry machinery of ISAV is composed of a complex of the ISAV F and ISAV hemagglutinin esterase (HE) proteins in an unknown stoichiometry prior to receptor engagement by ISAV HE. Following binding of the receptor to ISAV HE, dissociation of the ISAV F protein from HE, and subsequent endocytosis, the ISAV F protein resolves into a fusion-competent oligomeric state. Here, we present a 2.1 Å crystal structure of the fusion core of the ISAV F protein determined at low pH. This structure has allowed us to unambiguously demonstrate that the ISAV entry machinery exhibits typical class I viral fusion protein architecture. Furthermore, we have determined stabilizing factors that accommodate the pH-dependent mode of ISAV transmission, and our structure has allowed the identification of a central coil that is conserved across numerous and varied post-fusion viral glycoprotein structures. We then discuss a mechanistic model of ISAV fusion that parallels the paramyxoviral class I fusion strategy wherein attachment and fusion are relegated to separate proteins in a similar fashion to ISAV fusion.

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Cook, J. D., Soto-Montoya, H., Korpela, M. K., & Lee, J. E. (2015). Electrostatic architecture of the Infectious Salmon Anemia Virus (ISAV) core fusion protein illustrates a carboxyl-carboxylate pH sensor. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 290(30), 18495–18504. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.644781

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