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Structural features of NS3 of Dengue virus serotypes 2 and 4 in solution and insight into RNA binding and the inhibitory role of quercetin
Author(s) -
Pan Ankita,
Saw Wuan Geok,
Subramanian Manimekalai Malathy Sony,
Grüber Ardina,
Joon Shin,
Matsui Tsutomu,
Weiss Thomas M.,
Grüber Gerhard
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section d
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.374
H-Index - 138
ISSN - 2059-7983
DOI - 10.1107/s2059798317003849
Subject(s) - ns3 , dengue virus , allosteric regulation , virology , helicase , rna , serine protease , rna dependent rna polymerase , dengue fever , biology , protease , linker , chemistry , hepatitis c virus , biochemistry , virus , enzyme , gene , computer science , operating system
Dengue virus (DENV), which has four serotypes (DENV‐1 to DENV‐4), is the causative agent of the viral infection dengue. DENV nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) comprises a serine protease domain and an RNA helicase domain which has nucleotide triphosphatase activities that are essential for RNA replication and viral assembly. Here, solution X‐ray scattering was used to provide insight into the overall structure and flexibility of the entire NS3 and its recombinant helicase and protease domains for Dengue virus serotypes 2 and 4 in solution. The DENV‐2 and DENV‐4 NS3 forms are elongated and flexible in solution. The importance of the linker residues in flexibility and domain–domain arrangement was shown by the compactness of the individual protease and helicase domains. Swapping of the 174 PPAVP 179 linker stretch of the related Hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 into DENV‐2 NS3 did not alter the elongated shape of the engineered mutant. Conformational alterations owing to RNA binding are described in the protease domain, which undergoes substantial conformational alterations that are required for the optimal catalysis of bound RNA. Finally, the effects of ATPase inhibitors on the enzymatically active DENV‐2 and DENV‐4 NS3 and the individual helicases are presented, and insight into the allosteric effect of the inhibitor quercetin is provided.

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