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RNA to Rule Them All: Critical Steps in Lassa Virus Ribonucleoparticle Assembly and Recruitment

Lennart Sänger, Harry M. Williams, Dingquan Yu, Dominik Vogel, Jan Kosiński, Maria Rosenthal, Charlotte Uetrecht

2023Journal of the American Chemical Society15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lassa virus is a negative-strand RNA virus with only four structural proteins that causes periodic outbreaks in West Africa. The nucleoprotein (NP) encapsidates the viral genome, forming ribonucleoprotein complexes (RNPs) together with the viral RNA and the L protein. RNPs must be continuously restructured during viral genome replication and transcription. The Z protein is important for membrane recruitment of RNPs, viral particle assembly, and budding and has also been shown to interact with the L protein. However, the interaction of NP, viral RNA, and Z is poorly understood. Here, we characterize the interactions between Lassa virus NP, Z, and RNA using structural mass spectrometry. We identify the presence of RNA as the driver for the disassembly of ring-like NP trimers, a storage form, into monomers to subsequently form higher order RNA-bound NP assemblies. We locate the interaction site of Z and NP and demonstrate that while NP binds Z independently of the presence of RNA, this interaction is pH-dependent. These data improve our understanding of RNP assembly, recruitment, and release in Lassa virus.

Topics & Concepts

Lassa virusRNANucleoproteinRibonucleoproteinArenavirusVP40ChemistryVirologyRNA-dependent RNA polymeraseTranscription (linguistics)Viral replicationRibonucleoprotein particleVirusCell biologyBiologyGeneBiochemistryIn vitroLymphocytic choriomeningitisLinguisticsCytotoxic T cellPhilosophyViral Infections and Outbreaks ResearchViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyBacillus and Francisella bacterial research
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