The Triplex-Centric Assembly and Maturation of the Herpesvirus Procapsid

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Abstract

Herpesviruses are prevalent infectious agents in humans, with complex structures and life cycles. The viability and detail of a model of capsid assembly and maturation can now be examined against the recently available mature herpesvirus capsids structures. The first large assembly product is the icosahedral procapsid with an outer shell composed of major capsid proteins (MCPs) connected by triplexes, and an inner shell of scaffold proteins. The asymmetric triplexes have specific and conserved orientations, suggesting a key role in assembly. In the mature capsid structures, triplexes bound to three MCPs may represent an assembly unit where, in most cases, the N-terminus of one MCP wraps around the E-loop of another MCP. The model accommodates the incorporation of a portal into capsid, required for genome encapsidation and viral viability. Cleavage of the scaffold triggers maturation of procapsid. Each of the MCPs rotates mostly as a rigid body, except for the flexible peripheral parts that remodel to close the capsid floor. Angularization of the capsid shifts the portal outward to a better contact with the capsid shell. Understanding these events in the herpesvirus life cycle to atomic detail will facilitate the development of drugs that uniquely target assembly and maturation.

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