Xue Wang, Fengting Xu, Jiasen Liu, Bingquan Gao, Yanxin Liu, Yujia Zhai, Jun
Ma, Kai Zhang, Timothy S. Baker, Klaus Schulten, Dong Zheng, Hai Pang, and
Fei Sun.
Atomic model of rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus by cryo-electron
microscopy and crystallography.
PLoS Pathogens, 9:e1003132, 2013.
(14 pages).
(PMC: 3547835)
WANG2013
Rabbit hemorrhagic disease, first described in China in 1984, causes hemorrhagic necrosis
of the liver. Its etiological agent, rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV), belongs to the
Lagovirus genus in the family Caliciviridae. The detailed molecular structure of any
lagovirus has yet to be determined. Here, we report a cryo-electron
microscopic (cryoEM) reconstruction of wild-type RHDV at 6.5 Å resolution and the
crystal structures of the shell (S) and protruding (P) domains of its major capsid protein,
VP60, each at 2.0 Å resolution. From these data we built a complete atomic model of
the RHDV capsid. VP60 has a conserved S domain and a specific P2 sub-domain that
differs from those found in other caliciviruses. As seen in the shell portion of the RHDV
12 cryoEM map, which was resolved to 5.5 Å, the N-terminal arm (NTA) domain
of VP60 folds back onto its cognate S domain. Sequence alignments of VP60 from six
groups of RHDV isolates revealed seven regions of high variation that could be mapped
onto the surface of the P2 sub-domain and suggested three putative pockets might be
responsible for binding to histo-blood group antigens. A flexible loop in one of these
regions was shown to interact with rabbit tissue cells and contains an important epitope
for anti-RHDV antibody production. Our study provides a reliable, pseudo-atomic model
of a Lagovirus and suggests a new candidate for an efficient vaccine that can be used
to protect rabbits from RHDV infection.
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