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Journal of Virology, June 2000, p. 5667-5678, Vol. 74, No. 12
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Surface Conformation of Sindbis Virus
Glycoproteins E1 and E2 at Neutral and Low pH, as Determined by Mass
Spectrometry-Based Mapping
Brett S.
Phinney,1
Kevin
Blackburn,2 and
Dennis T.
Brown1,*
Department of Biochemistry, North Carolina
State University, Raleigh, North Carolina
27695,1 and Department of Structural
Chemistry, Glaxo Wellcome, Inc., Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
27709-33982
Received 23 December 1999/Accepted 18 March 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Sindbis virus contains two membrane glycoproteins, E1 and E2, which
are organized into 80 trimers of heterodimers (spikes). These trimers
form a precise T=4 icosahedral protein lattice on the surface of the
virus. Very little is known about the organization of the E1 and E2
glycoproteins within the spike trimer. To gain a better understanding
of how the proteins E1 and E2 are arranged in the virus membrane, we
have used the techniques of limited proteolysis and amino acid chemical
modification in combination with mass spectrometry. We have determined
that at neutral pH the E1 protein regions that are accessible to
proteases include domains 1-21 (region encompassing amino acids 1 to
21), 161-176, and 212-220, while the E2 regions that are accessible
include domains 31-84, 134-148, 158-186, 231-260, 299-314, and
324-337. When Sindbis virus is exposed to low pH, E2 amino acid
domains 99-102 and 262-309 became exposed while other domains became
inaccessible. Many new E1 regions became accessible after exposure to
low pH, including region 86-91, which is in the putative fusion domain of E1 of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) (M. C. Kielian et al., J. Cell
Biol. 134:863-872, 1996). E1 273-287 and region 145-158 were also
exposed at low pH. These data support a model for the structure of the
alphavirus spike in which the E1 glycoproteins are centrally located as
trimers which are surrounded and protected by the E2 glycoprotein.
These data improve our understanding of the structure of the virus
membrane and have implications for understanding the protein
conformational changes which accompany the process of virus-cell
membrane fusion.
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INTRODUCTION |
Sindbis virus, the
prototype of the Alphavirus subgroup of the
Togaviridae, has a well-defined T=4 icosahedral structure
composed of three structural proteins E1, E2, and C (3, 10, 32, 49). The capsid protein combines with the virus's positive-sense 42S RNA genome in the infected cell cytoplasm and is enveloped in a
host-derived membrane bilayer which contains the two virus structural
glycoproteins E1 and E2 (7, 8, 10, 47). The E1 and E2
glycoproteins form trimers of heterodimers in the endoplasmic reticulum
of the infected cell. The trimers are exported to the plasma membrane,
where interaction with nucleocapsids followed by lateral associations
between 80 of the trimers produces the icosahedral lattice of spike
complexes on the surface of the virus (3, 32, 36, 47). These
protein-protein associations are responsible for the precise
icosahedral structure of the virus membrane and are stable even in the
presence of a nonionic detergent (36). The virus
nucleocapsid is situated within the virus membrane and is composed of
240 copies of the capsid protein organized into a T=4 icosahedron
matching, precisely, the geometry of the glycoproteins in the virus
membrane. The inner icosahedral protein shell is connected to the outer
membrane protein shell through specific interactions between the capsid
protein and the endodomain of glycoprotein E2 (22, 23).
It has been difficult to study the configuration of the structural
glycoproteins in the Sindbis virus membrane bilayer. No crystal
structure exists for the membrane glycoproteins, and although the
technology has greatly improved, it is unlikely that electron cryomicroscopy will produce images at a resolution sufficient to
ascertain protein configurations at atomic resolution. It is important
to understand how these proteins are arranged in the lipid bilayer, how
they contact one another, which regions of these proteins are exposed
on the surface of the spike complex, and which are buried within this
structure. This information is important in evaluating domains which
are critical for maintaining the structural integrity of the virus and
determining the protein domains responsible for virus host
interactions, penetration, membrane fusion, and antibody response.
Furthermore, Sindbis virus is currently being considered as a
vector for human genetic engineering and gene therapy (52).
Knowing how its two structural proteins are organized can help produce
a more precisely targeted vector and may help prevent unwanted immune reactions.
The precise configuration of the E1 and E2 glycoproteins in the spike
complex remains unclear. Enzymatic radiolabeling of exposed tyrosines
has indicated that while E1 and E2 have similar numbers of tyrosines in
their ectodomains, the tyrosines in E2 are more accessible for labeling
than those of E1. Chemical cross-linking studies conducted on the
Sindbis virus spike complex in the mature virion have shown that E1-E1
associations stabilize the spike trimer and that the E2 members of the
trimer are located on the periphery of the spike, where they form E2-E2
interactions around the fivefold and sixfold axis (3).
Electron cryomicroscopy imaging of a PE2-containing Sindbis virus
mutant suggested that the E3 region of PE2 lies at the periphery of the
spike complex (33). Electron cryomicroscopy of virus
complexed with anti-E2 Fab monoclonal antibody fragments showed the Fab
fragment to bind on the spike periphery (45). All of these
data support an organization of the spike which has E1 centrally
located and protected by E2. Others studies have resulted in a model in
which the E2 glycoprotein occupies the central portion of the spike and
prevents contact between the E1 proteins. This conclusion is based on
the observation that multimers of E1 are not detected in
detergent-lysed Semliki Forest virus (SFV) until the virus is exposed
to low pH. Upon exposure to acid conditions, trimers of E1 can be
recovered (39, 50, 51). A morphological study of SFV
conducted by electron cryomicroscopy claimed to visualize a process in
which the E1 and E2 proteins changed positions in the spike. In this
structural reorganization, the E2 protein, which separates the
peripheral E1 proteins, moves from the center of the spike to the
periphery. This process was called "swiveling" (16).
Several domains of the spike complex have been located on the surface
by the technique of escape mutation mapping using monoclonal antibody
probes. These studies have shown that (i) the major viral antigenic
determinant is on the E2 protein in the region from amino acids 173 to
220 (region 173-220) and (ii) E2 region 186-212 is located on the
surface of the spike complex. Also, a charge escape mutation in E1 132 blocked the monoclonal antibody to region 186-212, suggesting that it
may be located near this region (46). Finally, it was shown
that antibodies responsible for virus neutralization recognized
multiple epitopes on E2 and one epitope on E1 (40).
Conformational changes occur in the alphavirus spike as the process of
attachment and membrane fusion takes place. The process of virus
membrane-cell membrane fusion can be induced by transient exposure of
Sindbis virus-cell complexes to acid pH followed by return to neutral
pH (1, 12, 13, 25). We have proposed that this in vitro
low-pH-mediated fusion is a two-step event. The initial conformational
change required for fusion occurs at acid pH; however, return to
neutral-pH conditions is required to complete a second step in the
fusion process (12). We have proposed that the return to
neutrality is required to establish conditions which allow the
reduction of disulfide bridges which stabilize the alphavirus structure
(1, 4). E1 region 75-98 is the putative fusion domain, and
mutations in this domain in SFV (a related alphavirus) abolish fusion
activity (19, 20). There are five cysteine residues between
the amino terminus of E1 and the putative fusogenic domain. Evidence
suggests that these cysteines are involved in disulfide bridges which
would produce a complex three-dimensional structure. It is unlikely
that this complex structure could penetrate the host cell membrane to
position the fusion domains such that a hydrophobic channel could be
created. We have proposed that these disulfides must be reduced before the interaction of the fusogenic domain with the target (host cell)
membrane (1).
The precise conformational changes produced in the glycoprotein spike
by low-pH exposure are unknown. Reported changes include a decrease in
sedimentation velocity (13), a change in sensitivity to
proteolytic enzymes (4, 13), an increase in hydrophobicity (30), an increase in the radii of the spike complex
(48), and a possible swiveling of the E1 glycoprotein from
the periphery to the center of the spike complex (16). A
recent study using monoclonal antibody probes determined that upon
low-pH exposure, a new epitope is exposed and that a mutation in E1 157 will abolish the binding of the antibody to this epitope
(2).
To further elucidate the structure of the alphavirus spike, we have
used the techniques of limited proteolysis and selective surface
chemical modification in combination with mass spectrometry (MS) to
determine which regions of the E1 and E2 proteins are exposed on the
virus surface. We have also used this technology to determine how
protein conformations change when the virus is exposed to low pH. This
technique has been successfully used to determine viral protein
dynamics in several non-membrane-containing viruses including flock
house virus and rhinovirus (5, 6, 24, 43). This technique is
based on the principle that sequences of amino acids that are exposed
on the surface of the spike complex will be digested by small
concentrations of proteases whereas those buried in the spike complex
will be inaccessible. The peptides produced are separated from the
remaining virus and identified by MS-based sequencing. This technique
is fast and accurate and needs only femtomole amounts of peptide to be
accurately identified. This procedure can identify all regions
accessible on the surface at the same time, in the same experiment,
without the necessity to modify the amino acid sequence or bind
anything to the virus that could change its conformation.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Materials.
All chemicals were HPLC (high-pressure liquid
chromatography) or ultra grade and purchased from Sigma Chemical.
125I was purchased from New England Nuclear.
Sequencing-grade modified porcine trypsin was purchased from Promega
and stored at
80°C until use. Peptides for MALDI-TOF
(matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time of flight) MS mass
calibration, iodination, and trypsin controls were purchased from
Sigma. Immobilized pepsin was purchased from Pierce. Iodogen
(1,3,4,6-tetrachloro-3
,6
-diphenylglycoluril) tubes and micro BCA
(bicinchoninic acid) protein assays were purchased from Pierce. Amicon
50-kDa-cutoff membrane tubes were purchased from Millipore.
C18 Zip-Tips were purchased from Millipore. Poros R3 medium
was obtained from PE Applied Biosystems.
Virus and cells.
BHK-21 cells were cultured at 37°C in
Gibco minimal essential medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine
serum, 5% tryptose phosphate broth, 2 mM L-glutamine, and
50 µM gentamicin in 75-cm2 flasks. Heat-resistant Sindbis
virus (SVHR) was originally provided by E. R. Pfefferkorn and was
passaged in BHK-21 cells as previously described (35).
Virus purification.
Medium from infected cells was harvested
after an 18-h infection. Cellular debris was removed by centrifugation
at 5,000 rpm at room temperature for 15 min in a clinical centrifuge.
The virus was then purified twice by gradient centrifugation. The first gradient purification was through a 15 to 35% potassium tartrate step
gradient in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS-D). The virus band was
collected and then purified through a second 10 to 40% linear
potassium tartrate gradient in PBS-D. Both centrifugations were done in
a Beckman SW28 rotor at 24,000 rpm for 16 h at 4°C. The purified
virus band was collected and concentrated by pelleting at 24,000 rpm in
a Beckman SW28 rotor through a 20% sucrose cushion at 4°C. The virus
was stored at 4°C under sterile conditions for no longer than 14 days. Protein content of the virus pellet was assayed by a micro BCA
assay and checked for purity on a mini-sodium dodecyl sulfate
(SDS)-12.5% polyacrylamide gel that was subsequently stained using
Coomassie brilliant blue R250. The virus was examined by negative-stain
electron microscopy to ensure that the virus was intact.
Predigestion of Pierce immobilized pepsin.
To remove any
free pepsin and to reduce autodigest products, the immobilized pepsin
was allowed to autodigest at 37°C for 45 min; then 200 µl of Pierce
immobilized pepsin was placed at 37°C. After 45 min, the immobilized
pepsin was washed in 1 ml of PBS-D (pH 4.5) three times using a 0.2-mm
syringe filter. The immobilized pepsin was then centrifuged at 1,500 rpm, and the excess PBS-D was discarded. The washed pepsin was then
placed on ice until use.
Limited virus digestion and peptide purification.
Virus was
diluted to 5 µg in 50 µl of reaction buffer with PBS-D at either pH
7.6 or pH 4.5. Proteases were added to the virus suspension: either 2 µl of Pierce sequencing-grade modified trypsin at a concentration of
0.52 mg/ml or 2 µl of washed immobilized pepsin. The trypsin reaction
was allowed to proceed for various lengths of time at 37°C and then
stopped by adding 4 µl of 100 mM TLCK
(N
-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone) in
0.1 N HCl. The pepsin digest was carried out at 37°C in an Eppendorf
shaker at 1,050 rpm. Removing the immobilized pepsin from the virus
stopped the reaction. The digested peptides and immobilized pepsin were removed from the remaining virus by centrifugation through an Amicon
50-kDa-cutoff membrane tube. The peptides were stored at
80°C until
MS analysis could be conducted.
MS and MS/MS analysis for trypsin and pepsin digest
products.
Liquid chromatography (LC)/MS analyses of aliquots of
each digest of Sindbis virus were done using an Ultimate capillary LC system (LC Packings, San Francisco, Calif.; equipped with a Famos autosampler) coupled to a quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-TOF) mass spectrometer (Micromass, Manchester, United Kingdom) with a Z-spray ion
source. Aliquots of each digest were preconcentrated and desalted onto
a guard column (300 µm [inside diameter {i.d.}] by 1 mm; LC
Packings) packed with Pepmap C18 material using the Famos
autosampler. After the preconcentration step, the guard column was
switched in-line with the analytical capillary column. Peptides were
then separated using a 75-µm-i.d. by 15-cm capillary column packed with 3 µm of Pepmap C18 material. Mobile phase A
consisted of 0.1% formic acid in a 2% acetonitrile solution, while
mobile phase B consisted of 0.1% formic acid in an 80-20%
acetonitrile-water solution. Peptides were eluted from the column into
the microelectrospray ion source of the Q-TOF mass spectrometer using a
gradient of 5% to 50% B in 30 min. The outlet of the capillary column
was coupled to a platinum-coated 360-µm-outside-diameter- by
20-µm-i.d. fused silica spray tip (10-µm tip i.d. outlet; New
Objective, Inc., Cambridge, Mass.) which made electrical contact
through the Picotip holder (New Objective) in the Z-spray ion source. MS survey scans were acquired at a rate of 2 per s from m/z
(mass-to-charge ratio) 400 to 2,000. The instrument was operated in a
data-dependent MS-to-tandem MS (MS/MS) switching mode where peptide
ions detected in MS survey scans triggered a switch to MS/MS for
obtaining peptide product ion spectra. To identify peptides contained
in the digest, uninterpreted peptide product ion spectra were searched
against a protein database containing the sequences of bovine trypsin, porcine pepsin, and Sindbis virus capsid, E1, and E2 proteins using the
SEQUEST program (14). Alternatively, product ion spectra were searched against the nonredundant protein database using the
Mascot search program (Matrix Sciences, Ltd., London, United Kingdom).
Searches were done both with and without the protease specificities
option turned on.
Iodination of intact virus.
Sindbis virus was iodinated with
125I or 127I using Pierce iodotubes. Iodination
with 125I was carried out with 1 mCi of 125I
per reaction sample. The iodination reaction was stopped with the
addition of saturated (0.453 mg/ml, 25°C) tyrosine. Excess 125I was removed by gel filtration using Sephadex G-25.
Radiolabeled virus was stored at 4°C until use. Virus was iodinated
with 127I using 50 µM K125I in PBS-D (pH
7.4). The reaction was stopped by the addition of excess tyrosine and
stored at
80°C until use. The virus was denatured by the addition
of 1% BME and heated at 99°C for 25 min. The denatured virus was
then digested with trypsin for 18 h at 37°C; the peptides were
not removed from the remaining virus after the digest was completed.
Digestion with protease V8.
The digestion conditions and
virus concentration were the same as for the trypsin digest of
iodinated and noniodinated virus. V8 was added at 4 µg of V8 per 100 µl of SVHR. The iodinated and noniodinated SVHR was denatured and
reduced by heating at 99°C in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol (BME)
(same conditions as for trypsin digest). The digestion was allowed to
proceed 16 h at 37°C. Digestion was stopped by freezing the
sample at
80°C.
MALDI-MS of iodinated virus peptides.
Viral tryptic peptides
iodinated with 127I were analyzed using a Bruker Proflex
linear TOF mass spectrometer equipped with a MALDI source, delayed
extraction, and a 1-GHz digitizer. The peptides were desalted with
either C18 Zip-Tips or homemade micro-desalting columns
using Poros R3 medium; 1.5 µl of desalted peptides were combined with
1.5 µl of saturated
-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid in 50%
acetonitrile with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid. The above mixture was
applied to the MALDI target using the dried droplet method. Mass
calibration was obtained first through an external calibration and then
through an internal calibration using diagnostic capsid tryptic masses.
The mass spectrometer used in this study typically has a mass accuracy
of 0.05 to 0.1% if calibrated internally. Iodinated peptides were
compared to noniodinated peptide controls, and differences in the
spectra were used to identify the iodinated masses. Comparing these
shifted masses to masses computed from a theoretical trypsin digest of
the iodinated Sindbis virus structural proteins then identified the
peptides with the modified tyrosines. Cases where masses obtained by
MALDI-MS coincidentally match more than one possible Sindbis virus
peptide are given less weight than masses that have only one possible
Sindbis virus peptide match.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of iodinated and
noniodinated virus proteins.
Iodinated and noniodinated viral
proteins were separated on a 12.5% polyacrylamide gel. The gel was
dried and visualized by autoradiography (29).
Nonradiolabeled viral proteins were identified by silver staining as
previously described (42).
 |
RESULTS |
Protein domains exposed on the surface of the virus spike complex
at neutral pH.
To determine which domains of E1 and E2 are
accessible to proteases in an aqueous neutral-pH environment, we
performed a number of limited proteolysis experiments on intact Sindbis
virus. Limited proteolysis when combined with MS can be used to probe
for higher-order structure of proteins and protein complexes (for a
review, see reference 21). Freshly prepared Sindbis
virus was treated with trypsin or pepsin as described in Materials and
Methods. The peptides released from the virus by protease treatment
were separated from the partially digested virus and identified by MS
as described in Materials and Methods. The released peptides were
separated by nanoscale capillary LC which was coupled through a
microelectrospray interface to a Q-TOF mass spectrometer. Peptides
detected by the mass spectrometer were subjected to MS/MS in order to
generate product ion spectra. MS/MS is a technique by which a selected precursor ion is fragmented, and the resulting fragment ions are mass
analyzed to yield a product ion (fragment ion) spectrum. Peptide
primary sequence can be derived from product ion spectra (31,
37), and computer algorithms can rapidly search protein databases
with uninterpreted product ion spectra for matching peptide sequences
(14).
A representative product ion spectrum of E2 peptide 31-44 and
corresponding sequence is shown in Fig.
1. The total numbers of peptides
recovered from trypsin digests of 1, 5, and 15 min are shown in Fig.
2. No Sindbis virus glycoprotein
fragments were seen in the 1-min digest. Figure 2 shows the peptides
released from E1, E2, and capsid. Peptides released from the virus at
neutral pH are primarily from E2. The peptides released from E2 are in amino acid regions 31-84, 134-148, 158-186, 231-260, 299-314, and
324-337. This constitutes 39% of the amino acids of E2 on the
ectodomain of the virus. By contrast, few E1 peptides were released.
The peptides released from E1 are in amino acid regions 1-21,
161-176, and 212-220. This constitutes only 13% of the available amino acids on the ectodomain of the virus. Identification of these
regions does not exclude other protein domains from being exposed on
the surface, especially regions containing a high number of disulfide
bonds. Because the SEQUEST and Mascot algorithms used for database
searching do not allow for identification of disulfide-linked peptides,
peptide molecular weights from spectra not matched to Sindbis virus
peptides with SEQUEST or Mascot were searched against a protein
database using a disulfide scanning program (available at Rockefeller
University [http://www.proteometrics.com]). This program models every
possible disulfide linkage in a protein of interest, calculates the
expected molecular weights of all disulfide-linked peptide
combinations, and compares these expected molecular weights to the
input molecular weights. Using this program, we did not find any masses
that matched disulfide-bonded peptides. This indicates that if these
regions were on the surface, their conformation might be constrained by
the disulfide bonds in such a way as to prevent protease cleavage sites
from being exposed. The MS proteolytic cleavages indicate that many
more E2 than E1 regions are accessible at neutral pH. These data are in
agreement with previously published radioiodination studies which
showed E2 to be more exposed on the virus surface than E1 (41,
44). These data are also consistent with the monoclonal antibody
studies described above (28, 46). These data support the
structural model of E2 occupying the outer surface of the spike complex
and shielding a centrally located E1.

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FIG. 1.
Representative product ion spectra of a peptide released
from the Sindbis virus spike complex. Sindbis virus was digested with
trypsin for 15 min as described in Materials and Methods. The released
peptides were removed from the remaining virus, separated by capillary
HPLC, and analyzed by LC/MS with data-dependent MS/MS switching. This
peptide was matched to E2 31-44 using the Mascot search engine.
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FIG. 2.
Tryptic peptides released from the Sindbis virus spike
complex at neutral pH. Virus was digested at 1, 5, and 15 min, and the
released peptides were removed from the remaining virus, separated by
capillary HPLC, and analyzed by LC/MS with data-dependent MS/MS
switching. The x axis indicates the amino acid number from
the amino to carboxy terminus. No Sindbis virus peptides were found in
the 1-min digests.
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As indicated in Fig.
2, capsid fragments were found in the 5- and
15-min samples along with E1 and E2 fragments. As capsid
is located in
the interior of the virus, it should not be accessible
to protease. It
is unlikely that these capsid fragments are transiently
exposed on the
surface of the virus, as has been indicated in
similar studies of flock
house and rhinoviruses (
5,
24).
It is also highly unlikely
that fragments from the capsid protein
could cross a lipid bilayer or
that trypsin could cross the membrane
bilayer to digest capsid. The
fragments that are found constitute
almost the entire capsid protein.
The origin of these fragments
is best explained by the possibility that
either some virus has
been destroyed during purification or fragments
of capsid proteins
from the debris of infected cells adhere to the
virus as it is
purified. Capsid protein has a large number of
hydrophobic residues
and is likely very "sticky." To determine if a
subpopulation of
the virus particles were damaged during virus
purification and
were releasing the capsid protein, we iodinated the
whole purified
virus with
125I. Previous studies have shown
that capsid protein is not iodinated
if the virus is intact (
41,
44). Figure
3 shows iodinated
Sindbis virus proteins from intact (used in the MS analysis described
above) or lysed virus separated on a reducing SDS-polyacrylamide
gel.
The capsid protein is clearly iodinated in the lysed virus,
but its
iodinated form is absent in the nonlysed virus preparation.
E2 is more
heavily labeled than E1 in the sample of intact virus.
E1 and E2
acquire similar amounts of label when virus is lysed
before iodination.
The glycoprotein E1 contains 16 tyrosine residues
in its ectodomain,
while E2 contains 20. These results are consistent
with previously
published radioiodination studies of Sindbis virus
(
41,
44).
These data suggest that the capsid fragments seen
in the MS analysis
are not the result of degrading capsid protein
in a population of
broken virus particles; rather, these fragments
are fortuitously bound
to the surface of the particles.

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FIG. 3.
Purified Sindbis virus is intact, and capsid protein is
not iodinated unless it is lysed (+) with 0.1% SDS prior to
iodination. In the nonlysed viral sample ( ), no capsid is seen, and
E2 is iodinated to a greater extent than E1, which is consistent with
previous studies.
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Protein domains exposed on the surface of the virus spike complex
at low pH.
Having identified the amino acid sequences accessible
to proteases at neutral pH, we next conducted experiments to determine how the spike proteins change conformation when the virus is exposed to
low pH. When Sindbis virus is exposed to low pH, a conformational change takes place that is the first step in a two-step process which
can lead to the fusion of the virus membrane with a target membrane
(12). The second step in membrane fusion requires a return
to neutral-pH conditions. We have presented evidence that this step is
necessary to allow reshuffling of disulfide bridges which maintain the
structure of the virus membrane (1, 13, 25). Fuller et al.
(16) have indicated that the conformational change occurring
at low pH involves a dramatic reorganization of the virus membrane in
which the E1 and E2 proteins change their protein-protein contacts and
their physical positions in the protein lattice, a process referred to
as swiveling. Swiveling results from the breaking of the heterodimer of
E1 and E2, allowing the E1 proteins to move from the periphery of the
spike to the center, forming E1 homotrimers (16). These
homotrimers then initiate the fusion reaction which in SFV involves the
putative fusion domain E1 75-98 (20). This low-pH
conformational change renders Sindbis virus noninfectious while largely
preserving the overall virus structure (4, 13). If reducing
agents are then added to low-pH-treated virus, the virus will
disassemble, releasing its internal, capsid protein-complexed, RNA
genome (4).
To determine the protein rearrangements that take place when Sindbis
virus is exposed to a low-pH environment, Sindbis virus
was exposed to
pH 4.5 and then digested with pepsin for various
periods of time.
Pepsin is a quasi-specific protease that cleaves
at the carboxyl side
of hydrophobic, preferentially aromatic,
amino acids. Pepsin has an
optimum pH of 2.0 but is capable of
digesting proteins at pH 5.0 or
less. To control the digestion
process, pepsin immobilized on agarose
beads was used as described
in Materials and Methods. The beads, with
associated enzyme, were
removed from the virus by filtration. The
Sindbis virus peptides
released from pepsin digests of acid-treated
virus at 1, 5, and
15 min are shown in Fig.
4. Capsid fragments are again seen in
the
pepsin digests of low-pH-treated virus.

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FIG. 4.
Peptides released from the Sindbis virus spike complex
at low pH. Sindbis virus was digested with immobilized pepsin at pH 4.5 for 1, 5, and 15 min. The reaction was stopped, and the released
peptides were removed from the remaining virus, separated by capillary
HPLC, and analyzed by LC/MS with data-dependent MS/MS switching. The
x axis indicates the amino acid number from the amino to
carboxy terminus.
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The conformational changes which occur at low pH involve the exposure
of many E1 regions not detected at neutral pH. Some
of the E1 peptides
released from the surface of low-pH-treated
Sindbis virus include
regions 86-91, 110-119, and 273-287; only
two new regions of E2,
99-102 and 262-309, were exposed, and many
E2 regions that were
accessible to trypsin at neutral pH were
inaccessible to pepsin at pH
4.5 (see Fig.
7). Some of these E2
peptides seen at neutral pH but not
at pH 4.5 include regions
67-84, 158-167, and 310-314. Low-pH treatment
appears to expose
regions of E1 to the environment while causing
domains of E2 to
be
protected.
Chemical modification of tyrosines on the surface of the spike
complex at neutral pH.
Chemical modification of amino acids and
the identification of the protein domains containing those modified
amino acids by MS have proven to be a powerful tool for the
determination of protein conformation. Using iodine activated by
immobilized Iodogen, we have modified tyrosines on the surface of the
Sindbis virus spike complex (described in Materials and Methods).
Activated iodine can also modify histidines if a high concentration of
iodine is used and/or the reaction is done at pH 9.0 (38).
We used a very small concentration of activated iodine, 50 µm KI at
pH 7.4. At these conditions, no histidine is iodinated and only the surfaces of cells and viruses are iodinated (26). Iodine has a mass of 126.9 Da, and the sequence of the virus glycoproteins is
precisely known. It is therefore possible to precisely identify those
tyrosines which are exposed on the surface of the spike complex.
Purified Sindbis virus was iodinated with 127I using the
lodogen procedure (described in Materials and Methods). The reaction
was quenched with an equal volume of cold tyrosine, and the iodinated
virus was denatured by adding BME to a final concentration of 1% and
heating the mixture at 99°C for 25 min. The denatured virus was then
proteolytically digested with trypsin or V8 protease. The resulting
digests of iodinated virus were compared to noniodinated control
digests by MALDI-TOF MS. In these experiments, aliquots of each digest
mixture were analyzed without any separation of the resulting peptides.
Peptides containing iodotyrosines were identified by identifying masses
in the iodinated sample that had shifted by multiples of 126 Da from
the noniodinated controls.
A sample MALDI-TOF spectrum is shown in Fig.
5. Figure
5A is an overlay of two
spectra, one from iodinated and one from noniodinated
virus; Fig.
5B
shows a similar profile from iodinated angiotensin
III that was used as
a control. Using capsid fragments as internal
calibrants, accurate
masses were obtained by MALDI-TOF MS. All
of the iodinated peptides
found by this analysis are shown in
Table
1. Masses that can coincidently match
more than one Sindbis
virus tryptic peptide are given less confidence
than masses that
can be assigned to only one possible peptide. Masses
that have
an ambiguous assignment, for reasons described in Materials
and
Methods, and masses that have only one possible match are shown.
MALDI-TOF MS analysis identified 17 Sindbis virus spike peptides
digested with trypsin and V8 protease having iodine-modified tyrosines.
Of these 17 peptides, 5 are located on E1, 8 are located on E2,
2 are
located on capsid, and 2 are located on sequences identified
as PE2 (a
small amount of PE2 is incorporated naturally into virions
[
34]). The E1 peptides that are iodinated are in amino
acid
region 1-30, which contains tyrosines at positions 1, 15, and
24. No peptides were generated that separated Y1 from Y15; thus,
we were
unable to determine if both tyrosines 1 and 15 were iodinated.
It is,
however, likely that both are labeled, as peptide 14 (Table
1)
indicates that Y24 is iodinated as well.

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|
FIG. 5.
Representative MALDI-TOF spectrum comparing iodinated
and noniodinated Sindbis virus peptides. (A) Comparison of a tryptic
digest of Sindbis virus iodinated with 127I (red) to a
noniodinated Sindbis digest control (green). (B) Angiotensin III
control iodinated with 127I.
|
|
The E2 iodinated peptides are in regions 45-63, 138-190, and
325-347. Peptide 9 (Table
1) matches E2 regions 45-63, which
contains
an iodine-modified tyrosine at position 53. E2 region
138-190 contains
six tyrosines at positions 140, 155, 165, 176,
179, and 188. While
peptides 2 and 3 (Table
1) match E2 iodinated
peptides, peptide 2 can
also be matched to the noniodinated peptide
E1 51-79 and peptide 3 can
be matched to the noniodinated peptide
capsid 4-35. The data presented
in Table
1 indicate that tyrosines
140, 155, 165, and 188 are
iodinated. Tyrosines 176 and 179 may
be iodinated; however, we are
uncertain of this because no iodinated
fragments containing only these
tyrosines were found. Peptide
3 matches E2 160-190 with three added
iodines. It is likely that
either Y176 or Y179 is iodinated; the
addition of three iodines
to Y165 seems unlikely, as the chemistry of
iodine modification
indicates that tyrosines have two preferred sites
that can be
iodinated (
11). E2 region 325-347 contains two
tyrosines, at
positions 328 and 339. Peptides 16 and 17 (Table
1)
indicate
that both of these tyrosines are iodinated. Peptide 17 matches
E2 325-347 with four, five and six modifying iodines. The addition
of
three iodines per tyrosine molecule seems unlikely, as the
angiotensin
control did not indicate any tri-iodinated species.
Although unlikely,
no other Sindbis virus tryptic peptides could
be matched to these
masses.
Ions corresponding to iodinated capsid and PE2 peptides were also
found. Peptide 4 (Table
1) matches PE2 33-55 and indicates
that Y46
may be iodinated. Peptide 4 can also be matched to the
noniodinated
peptide E2 45-70, which could be a product of an
incomplete digest.
Peptide 13 (Table
1) matches PE2 29-64 and
also indicates that Y46 is
iodinated. Some PE2 can be found in
Sindbis virus (
34), and
PE2 peptides were found in the trypsin
limited digest experiments (data
not shown). Peptides 12 and 15
(Table
1) match capsid 175-202 and
134-163, respectively, and
indicate that Y162, Y189, and Y198 are
iodinated. The presence
of iodinated capsid fragments is consistent
with the limit digest
studies, and their presence is explained above.
In addition, previous
studies have shown that capsid Y180 is the only
exposed tyrosine
residue on the surface of intact Sindbis nucleocapsids
(
10).
The fact that we find iodinated tyrosines other then
Y180 provides
additional evidence that the capsid peptides found in
this study
were capsid fragments released during a lytic infection and
which
purified with the intact
virus.
It is unclear why E2 fragments containing tyrosines at positions 53, 64, and 66 were not found to be iodinated. The limit
digest data
suggested that the tyrosines were included in the
peptides released
from the spike complex within 15 min. This may
be due to MALDI
selectivity in ionizing certain peptides (
9)
or our ability
to control the extent of the trypsin digestion.
To determine the extent
to which iodinated tyrosines were being
released from the spike
complex, Sindbis virus was iodinated with
125I as described
in Materials and Methods. Samples of iodinated
and nonlabeled virus
were digested for 1, 5, 15, and 90 min. The
virus digests labeled with
125I were separated on an SDS-polyacrylamide gel and
visualized by
autoradiography. The nonradiolabeled digests were also
separated
on an SDS-polyacrylamide gel and visualized by silver
staining.
These results are shown in Fig.
6. Within 15 min, the proteins
labeled
with
125I appear to be completely digested, while the
nonlabeled proteins
appear to be relatively intact even at 90 min. This
result could
suggest that the tyrosines modified by
125I
are almost completely digested from the surface of the proteins,
while
the majority of the unlabeled proteins remain largely intact.
It is
more likely, however, that the superficial position of the
iodine-labeled tyrosines results in their being rapidly cleared
from
the surface, and because they are very radioactive they easily
overexpose the gel, giving the impression that the iodinated residues
are more sensitive to proteolysis. In reality the presence of
modifications on the tyrosines probably reduces susceptibility
to
proteolysis through steric hindrance.

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|
FIG. 6.
Tyrosines are digested from the viral spike surface,
while the spike proteins remain largely intact. Sindbis virus was
iodinated with 125I. The iodinated virus was then digested
with trypsin for 1, 5, 15, and 90 min, and the resulting mixture was
separated on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Radiolabeled peptides were
visualized by autoradiography and compared to the nonradiolabeled viral
proteins, which were visualized by silver staining.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The stable and precise icosahedral structure of Sindbis virus
makes it an excellent model for studies on the structure of virus
membranes. We have used limited proteolysis in combination with MS to
determine which amino acids are accessible on the surface of the
glycoprotein spike complex and how the conformation of these protein
domains change when the virus is exposed to low pH. This MS-based
mapping technique has determined the conformational dynamics of two
non-membrane-containing viruses, flock house virus and rhinovirus
(5, 24). The MS-based mapping not only matched the crystal
structure for each virus but also identified protein domains of the
viruses that dynamically "breathe." These dynamic conformational
changes were not seen or predicted from the viral crystal structures.
MS-based mapping is, therefore, able to assay flexible conformational
changes in viral proteins that were previously unknown. The study
presented here is similar to these previous studies with one major
exception: Sindbis virus is a membrane-containing virus, and no crystal
structure exists for any of its membrane components.
The data presented above indicate that the configuration of E1 and E2
in the spike complex at neutral pH is most likely one in which E1
occupies the center of the structure and is almost entirely shielded by
E2 (Fig. 7). The E2 protein domains found on the surface of the spike are consistent with the observation that E2
173-220 is the major antigenic site on E2 (46). Strauss and
coworkers (46) also identified E2 domain 186-212 as exposed at neutral pH. We found that regions 158-186 and 231-260 are located on the surface of the spike. Our experiments may have missed the region
between E2 amino acids 186 and 231 because there is a carbohydrate binding site at E2 position 196. Any peptides containing carbohydrate would be missed in our study because of the unknown mass additions and
heterogeneity of the carbohydrate. In addition, this region may not
have been cleaved efficiently due to steric hindrance caused by the
carbohydrate moiety. The three domains of E1 that are accessible and
not shielded by E2 are 1-21, 161-176, and 212-220. E1 contains a
number of cysteines between amino acids 49 and 114. It is possible that
these domains are on the surface of the spike complex, even though
these peptides were not detected. It is possible that disulfides
constrain the structure in this region to such an extent that trypsin
was not able to access potential cleavage sites. E1 and E2 both contain
two carbohydrate binding sites, E1 139 and 245 and E2 196 and 318, and
as indicated above, peptides containing this modification would have
escaped detection. The technique of tyrosine modification by iodination
before protease digestion can overcome some of these limitations
although iodinated tyrosines located in the same peptide as a
carbohydrate will still be missed.
Exposure of virus to low pH produced dramatic changes in the outcome of
these experiments (Fig. 7). The amount of E1 protein accessible to
protease increased from 13% to 35% of the total protein in the E1
ectodomain. The domains of E1 exposed by low pH included regions 86-91
and 110-119, which are near to and overlap the putative fusion domain
E1 75-98 described for SFV (20). E1 region 145-158 also
became accessible to protease after exposure to low pH. A recent study
showed that a charge mutation in E1 157 will block the binding of an E1
low-pH-specific monoclonal antibody (2), indicating that
this amino acid, and the region around it, are not exposed in a neutral
pH environment. Our data are consistent with these findings and further
indicate that region 145-158 is exposed at low pH while E1 region
161-170 is exposed at both neutral and low pH. Region 160-175 is also
conserved among the alphaviruses and has a conserved hydrophobic region
from amino acids 161 to 166. E1 region 273-287 was also exposed during
low-pH exposure. This domain is conserved among the alphaviruses and contains a number of hydrophobic amino acids between E1 276 and E1 287. It is interesting that region E1 161-166 is exposed at both neutral
and low pH whereas region 273-287 is exposed only at low pH.
Little is known about the fusion mechanism of Sindbis virus. It is
possible that Sindbis virus has a novel fusion motor, a contention
supported by its dissimilarity to other membrane-containing viruses.
Many viruses such as influenza virus and human immunodeficiency virus
employ hydrophobic coiled-coil domains located at the amino termini of
glycoproteins in their fusion motors. The sequence of protein around
the putative fusion domain in the alphavirus SFV does not contain a
predicted coiled-coil region. The E1 glycoproteins containing the
putative fusion domain also have 74 disulfide cross-bridged amino acids
between the amino-terminal ends of the protein and the fusion domain.
Clearly this globular structure cannot be forced through the membrane
of a host cell to allow integration of the fusion domain. Thus, the
alphaviruses may not follow the influenza virus paradigm regarding the
fusion of membranes by virus glycoproteins. The data presented above
also indicate that other conserved hydrophobic regions of the E1
protein, probably region 273-287 and possibly region 161-166, may
play a part in this fusion process.
Our data indicate that the E2 protein actually becomes less exposed at
low pH. This would seem to contradict previous studies that have shown
that upon low-pH exposure E2 becomes more accessible to trypsin
(3, 13). An explanation for this disparity is that we are
identifying only the most superficial domains of the spike complex.
Studies indicating an increase in E2 sensitivity at low-pH conditions
typically used a large amount of enzyme for a considerable period of
time. It is probable that under these conditions, additional
conformational changes take place in the E2 protein as a result of the
protease digestion itself and that these conformational changes then
lead to the complete digestion of E2.
The data presented above support the contention that the organization
of the alphavirus spike is one in which the E1 glycoprotein is
centrally situated and exists as E1 trimers. The E1 trimers are
surrounded by, and protected from the environment by, E2. This model is
in agreement with numerous other studies utilizing chemical
cross-linkers, antibody binding, electron microscopy, and genetics. It
greatly simplifies proposed mechanisms for the interaction of virus
glycoproteins with host cells during attachment and penetration. In
this model, the virus glycoproteins are not required to change position
in the envelope, a difficult process considering the multiple protein
interactions which hold the two nested icosahedra together (see
Introduction). The observation that E1 trimers are recovered after
detergent lysis of virus exposed to low pH (the basis for proposing the
alternative model) is likely the result of conformational changes
occurring low pH and stabilizing the hydrophobic domains in the
centrally located E1 trimer. The stabilized E1 trimers can then be
recovered after detergent lysis. Furthermore, the morphological studies
involving electron cryomicroscopy which purported to visualize the
proposed change in position of E1 and E2 (the second observation
leading to the alternative model) compared images of low-pH- and
neutral-pH-exposed virus at greatly different resolutions
(16), and the conformational changes reported may be due to
differences in the resolution of the data sets.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This research was supported in part by grants from The Foundation
for Research, Carson City Nevada, and the National Institutes of Health
(grant AI42775 to D.T.B.).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Campus Box 7622, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7622. Phone: (919) 515-5802. Fax: (919) 515-2047. E-mail:
Dennis_Brown{at}ncsu.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, June 2000, p. 5667-5678, Vol. 74, No. 12
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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