Role of the Herpes Simplex Virus CVSC Proteins at the Capsid Portal Vertex
Alexis Huet, Jamie B. Huffman, James F. Conway, Fred L. Homa
Abstract
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) is the causative agent of several pathologies ranging in severity from the common cold sore to life-threatening encephalitic infection. A critical step during productive HSV-1 infection is the cleavage and packaging of replicated, concatemeric viral DNA into preformed capsids. A key knowledge gap is how the capsid engages the replicated viral genome and the subsequent packaging of a unit-length HSV genome. Here, biochemical and structural studies focused on the unique portal vertex of wild-type HSV and packaging mutants provide insights into the mechanism of HSV genome packaging. The significance of our research is in identifying the portal proteins pUL6 and pUL17 as key viral factors for engaging the terminase complex with the capsid and the subsequent cleavage, packaging, and stable incorporation of the viral genome in the HSV-1 capsid.