International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2022)

Experimental Evidence of Intrinsic Disorder and Amyloid Formation by the <i>Henipavirus</i> W Proteins

  • Giulia Pesce,
  • Frank Gondelaud,
  • Denis Ptchelkine,
  • Juliet F. Nilsson,
  • Christophe Bignon,
  • Jérémy Cartalas,
  • Patrick Fourquet,
  • Sonia Longhi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23020923
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 2
p. 923

Abstract

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Henipaviruses are severe human pathogens within the Paramyxoviridae family. Beyond the P protein, the Henipavirus P gene also encodes the V and W proteins which share with P their N-terminal, intrinsically disordered domain (NTD) and possess a unique C-terminal domain. Henipavirus W proteins antagonize interferon (IFN) signaling through NTD-mediated binding to STAT1 and STAT4, and prevent type I IFN expression and production of chemokines. Structural and molecular information on Henipavirus W proteins is lacking. By combining various bioinformatic approaches, we herein show that the Henipaviruses W proteins are predicted to be prevalently disordered and yet to contain short order-prone segments. Using limited proteolysis, differential scanning fluorimetry, analytical size exclusion chromatography, far-UV circular dichroism and small-angle X-ray scattering, we experimentally confirmed their overall disordered nature. In addition, using Congo red and Thioflavin T binding assays and negative-staining transmission electron microscopy, we show that the W proteins phase separate to form amyloid-like fibrils. The present study provides an additional example, among the few reported so far, of a viral protein forming amyloid-like fibrils, therefore significantly contributing to enlarge our currently limited knowledge of viral amyloids. In light of the critical role of the Henipavirus W proteins in evading the host innate immune response and of the functional role of phase separation in biology, these studies provide a conceptual asset to further investigate the functional impact of the phase separation abilities of the W proteins.

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