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Structural Determination of the Australian Bat Lyssavirus Nucleoprotein and Phosphoprotein Complex

journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-30, 04:45 authored by Camilla M Donnelly, Murray Stewart, Justin A Roby, Vinod SundaramoorthyVinod Sundaramoorthy, Jade K Forwood
Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV) shows similar clinical symptoms as rabies, but there are currently no protein structures available for ABLV proteins. In lyssaviruses, the interaction between nucleoprotein (N) and phosphoprotein (N) in the absence of RNA generates a complex (N0P) that is crucial for viral assembly, and understanding the interface between these two proteins has the potential to provide insight into a key feature: the viral lifecycle. In this study, we used recombinant chimeric protein expression and X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of ABLV nucleoprotein bound to residues 1–40 of its phosphoprotein chaperone. Comparison of our results with the recently generated structure of RABV CVS-11 N0P demonstrated a highly conserved interface in this complex. Because the N0P interface is conserved in the lyssaviruses of phylogroup I, it is an attractive therapeutic target for multiple rabies-causing viral species.

History

Journal

Viruses

Volume

16

Article number

33

Pagination

1-13

Location

Basel, Switzerland

ISSN

1999-4915

eISSN

1999-4915

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

MDPI

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