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  4. Biophysical Characterization of a Vaccine Candidate Against HIV-1: The Transmembrane and Membrane Proximal Domains of HIV-1 gp41 as a Maltose Binding Protein Fusion
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Biophysical Characterization of a Vaccine Candidate Against HIV-1: The Transmembrane and Membrane Proximal Domains of HIV-1 gp41 as a Maltose Binding Protein Fusion

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Title
Biophysical Characterization of a Vaccine Candidate Against HIV-1: The Transmembrane and Membrane Proximal Domains of HIV-1 gp41 as a Maltose Binding Protein Fusion
Description

The membrane proximal region (MPR, residues 649–683) and transmembrane domain (TMD, residues 684–705) of the gp41 subunit of HIV-1’s envelope protein are highly conserved and are important in viral mucosal transmission, virus attachment and membrane fusion with target cells. Several structures of the trimeric membrane proximal external region (residues 662–683) of MPR have been reported at the atomic level; however, the atomic structure of the TMD still remains unknown. To elucidate the structure of both MPR and TMD, we expressed the region spanning both domains, MPR-TM (residues 649–705), in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with maltose binding protein (MBP). MPR-TM was initially fused to the C-terminus of MBP via a 42 aa-long linker containing a TEV protease recognition site (MBP-linker-MPR-TM).

Biophysical characterization indicated that the purified MBP-linker-MPR-TM protein was a monodisperse and stable candidate for crystallization. However, crystals of the MBP-linker-MPR-TM protein could not be obtained in extensive crystallization screens. It is possible that the 42 residue-long linker between MBP and MPR-TM was interfering with crystal formation. To test this hypothesis, the 42 residue-long linker was replaced with three alanine residues. The fusion protein, MBP-AAA-MPR-TM, was similarly purified and characterized. Significantly, both the MBP-linker-MPR-TM and MBP-AAA-MPR-TM proteins strongly interacted with broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies 2F5 and 4E10. With epitopes accessible to the broadly neutralizing antibodies, these MBP/MPR-TM recombinant proteins may be in immunologically relevant conformations that mimic a pre-hairpin intermediate of gp41.

Date Created
2015-08-21
Contributors
  • Gong, Zhen (Author)
  • Martin Garcia, Jose Manuel (Author)
  • Daskalova, Sasha (Author)
  • Craciunescu, Felicia (Author)
  • Song, Lusheng (Author)
  • Dorner, Katerina (Author)
  • Hansen, Debra (Author)
  • Yang, Jay-How (Author)
  • LaBaer, Joshua (Author)
  • Hogue, Brenda (Author)
  • Mor, Tsafrir (Author)
  • Fromme, Petra (Author)
  • Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (Contributor)
  • Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
  • Applied Structural Discovery (Contributor)
  • Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology (Contributor)
  • Innovations in Medicine (Contributor)
  • Personalized Diagnostics (Contributor)
  • College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
  • School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Resource Type
Text
Extent
22 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Reuse Permissions
Attribution
Primary Member of
ASU Regents' Professors Open Access Works
Identifier
Digital object identifier: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136507
Identifier Type
ISSN (International Standard Serial Number)
Identifier Value
1045-3830
Identifier Type
ISSN (International Standard Serial Number)
Identifier Value
1939-1560
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
Yes
Series
PLOS ONE
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.42205
Preferred Citation

Gong, Z., Martin-Garcia, J. M., Daskalova, S. M., Craciunescu, F. M., Song, L., Dörner, K., . . . Fromme, P. (2015). Biophysical Characterization of a Vaccine Candidate against HIV-1: The Transmembrane and Membrane Proximal Domains of HIV-1 gp41 as a Maltose Binding Protein Fusion. Plos One, 10(8). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0136507

Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Note
The article is published at http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0136507
System Created
  • 2017-04-06 07:05:45
System Modified
  • 2025-09-16 11:34:45
  •     
  • 9 months 1 week ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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