Atomic structure of the human herpesvirus 6B capsid and capsid-associated tegument complexes

  • Yibo Zhang
  • , Wei Liu
  • , Zihang Li
  • , Vinay Kumar
  • , Ana L. Alvarez-Cabrera
  • , Emily C. Leibovitch
  • , Yanxiang Cui
  • , Ye Mei
  • , Guo Qiang Bi
  • , Steve Jacobson
  • , Z. Hong Zhou*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

Human herpesvirus 6B (HHV-6B) belongs to the β-herpesvirus subfamily of the Herpesviridae. To understand capsid assembly and capsid-tegument interactions, here we report atomic structures of HHV-6B capsid and capsid-associated tegument complex (CATC) obtained by cryoEM and sub-particle reconstruction. Compared to other β-herpesviruses, HHV-6B exhibits high similarity in capsid structure but organizational differences in its CATC (pU11 tetramer). 180 “VΛ”-shaped CATCs are observed in HHV-6B, distinguishing from the 255 “Λ”-shaped dimeric CATCs observed in murine cytomegalovirus and the 310 “Δ”-shaped CATCs in human cytomegalovirus. This trend in CATC quantity correlates with the increasing genomes sizes of these β-herpesviruses. Incompatible distances revealed by the atomic structures rationalize the lack of CATC’s binding to triplexes Ta, Tc, and Tf in HHV-6B. Our results offer insights into HHV-6B capsid assembly and the roles of its tegument proteins, including not only the β-herpesvirus-specific pU11 and pU14, but also those conserved across all subfamilies of Herpesviridae.

Original languageEnglish
Article number5346
JournalNature Communications
Volume10
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2019

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