Co-reporter:Chen Wang;Swapnil C. Devarkar;Matthew T. Miller;Anand Ramanathan;Fuguo Jiang;Abdul G. Khan;Smita S. Patel
PNAS 2016 Volume 113 (Issue 3 ) pp:596-601
Publication Date(Web):2016-01-19
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1515152113
RNAs with 5′-triphosphate (ppp) are detected in the cytoplasm principally by the innate immune receptor Retinoic Acid Inducible
Gene-I (RIG-I), whose activation triggers a Type I IFN response. It is thought that self RNAs like mRNAs are not recognized
by RIG-I because 5′ppp is capped by the addition of a 7-methyl guanosine (m7G) (Cap-0) and a 2′-O-methyl (2′-OMe) group to
the 5′-end nucleotide ribose (Cap-1). Here we provide structural and mechanistic basis for exact roles of capping and 2′-O-methylation
in evading RIG-I recognition. Surprisingly, Cap-0 and 5′ppp double-stranded (ds) RNAs bind to RIG-I with nearly identical
Kd values and activate RIG-I’s ATPase and cellular signaling response to similar extents. On the other hand, Cap-0 and 5′ppp
single-stranded RNAs did not bind RIG-I and are signaling inactive. Three crystal structures of RIG-I complexes with dsRNAs
bearing 5′OH, 5′ppp, and Cap-0 show that RIG-I can accommodate the m7G cap in a cavity created through conformational changes
in the helicase-motif IVa without perturbing the ppp interactions. In contrast, Cap-1 modifications abrogate RIG-I signaling
through a mechanism involving the H830 residue, which we show is crucial for discriminating between Cap-0 and Cap-1 RNAs.
Furthermore, m7G capping works synergistically with 2′-O-methylation to weaken RNA affinity by 200-fold and lower ATPase activity.
Interestingly, a single H830A mutation restores both high-affinity binding and signaling activity with 2′-O-methylated dsRNAs.
Our work provides new structural insights into the mechanisms of host and viral immune evasion from RIG-I, explaining the
complexity of cap structures over evolution.
Co-reporter:Samantha A. Yost;Matthew T. Miller;Arash Grakoui;Elizabeth J. Elrod;Gyehwa Shin
PNAS 2012 Volume 109 (Issue 41 ) pp:16534-16539
Publication Date(Web):2012-10-09
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1210418109
Alphaviruses, a group of positive-sense RNA viruses, are globally distributed arboviruses capable of causing rash, arthritis,
encephalitis, and death in humans. The viral replication machinery consists of four nonstructural proteins (nsP1–4) produced
as a single polyprotein. Processing of the polyprotein occurs in a highly regulated manner, with cleavage at the P2/3 junction
influencing RNA template use during genome replication. Here, we report the structure of P23 in a precleavage form. The proteins
form an extensive interface and nsP3 creates a ring structure that encircles nsP2. The P2/3 cleavage site is located at the
base of a narrow cleft and is not readily accessible, suggesting a highly regulated cleavage. The nsP2 protease active site
is over 40 Å away from the P2/3 cleavage site, supporting a trans cleavage mechanism. nsP3 contains a previously uncharacterized protein fold with a zinc-coordination site. Known mutations
in nsP2 that result in formation of noncytopathic viruses or a temperature sensitive phenotype cluster at the nsP2/nsP3 interface.
Structure-based mutations in nsP3 opposite the location of the nsP2 noncytopathic mutations prevent efficient cleavage of
P23, affect RNA infectivity, and alter viral RNA production levels, highlighting the importance of the nsP2/nsP3 interaction
in pathogenesis. A potential RNA-binding surface, spanning both nsP2 and nsP3, is proposed based on the location of ion-binding
sites and adaptive mutations. These results offer unexpected insights into viral protein processing and pathogenesis that
may be applicable to other polyprotein-encoding viruses such as HIV, hepatitis C virus (HCV), and Dengue virus.