Hiv-1 gag

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Once Gag is localized to discreet sites on the plasma membrane, multimerization of Gag takes place quite quickly , driven by the CA domain, and more specifically our focus here, the C-terminal domain of CA (CTD). There are four helices that contribute to the interaction of CA CTD with it's partner. <scene name='Hiv-1_gag/Cv/1'>A side-by-side interaction of CA CTD has been proposed </scene>, but many believe the forces involved in the side-by-side model are not great enough to account for the organization and structural stability of assembled Gag. Also, helix 1 of the CA CTD contains a very conserved region of residues within many retroviruses called the <scene name='User:Nathan_Roy/Mhr_side-by-side/1'>MHR (major homology region)</scene>. In the side-by-side model, the MHR is not responsible for the dimer organization, yet mutations in the MHR region have a greater impact on ''in vivo'' Gag assembly than mutations in the residues responsible for structural stablility of the side-by-side model. This led researchers to seek a domain swapped structure of the CA CTD. By making a single deletion of the Ala 177 residue (which lies in the loop between helix 1 and helix 2), the CA CTD domain adopts a domain-swapped conformation,<applet load='2ont_dimer.pdb' size='300' frame='true' align='right' caption='FIGURE 4. Domain swapped CA CTD, [[2ont]]' /> in which the MHR of helix 1 is extended to contact helices 2,3, and 4 of the adjacent CA CTD domain (Figure 4)(<scene name='User:Nathan_Roy/Mhr_domain_swapped/1'>MHR region</scene>). Keep in mind these are only models of Gag dimerization and subsequent multimerization, and that precise interactions that take place during Gag assembly are yet to be agreed upon.
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<applet load='1aum_dimer.pdb' size='300' frame='true' align='left' caption='FIGURE 3. Side-by-side structure of CA CTD, [[1aum]]' />
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Once Gag is localized to discreet sites on the plasma membrane, multimerization of Gag takes place quite quickly , driven by the CA domain, and more specifically our focus here, the C-terminal domain of CA (CTD). There are four helices that contribute to the interaction of CA CTD with it's partner. A side-by-side interaction has been proposed (Figure 3), but many believe the forces involved in the side-by-side model are not great enough to account for the organization and structural stability of assembled Gag. Also, helix 1 of the CA CTD contains a very conserved region of residues within many retroviruses called the MHR (major homology region)<scene name='User:Nathan_Roy/Mhr_side-by-side/1'>MHR region</scene>. In the side-by-side model, the MHR is not responsible for the dimer organization, yet mutations in the MHR region have a greater impact on ''in vivo'' Gag assembly than mutations in the residues responsible for structural stablility of the side-by-side model. This led researchers to seek a domain swapped structure of the CA CTD. By making a single deletion of the Ala 177 residue (which lies in the loop between helix 1 and helix 2), the CA CTD domain adopts a domain-swapped conformation,<applet load='2ont_dimer.pdb' size='300' frame='true' align='right' caption='FIGURE 4. Domain swapped CA CTD, [[2ont]]' /> in which the MHR of helix 1 is extended to contact helices 2,3, and 4 of the adjacent CA CTD domain (Figure 4)(<scene name='User:Nathan_Roy/Mhr_domain_swapped/1'>MHR region</scene>). Keep in mind these are only models of Gag dimerization and subsequent multimerization, and that precise interactions that take place during Gag assembly are yet to be agreed upon.
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Revision as of 10:05, 4 April 2013

PDB ID 2h3i

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Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Alexander Berchansky, Michal Harel, Nathan Roy

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