A Putative Amphipathic Alpha Helix in Hepatitis B Virus Small Envelope Protein Plays a Critical Role in the Morphogenesis of Subviral Particles
Sisi Yang, Zhongliang Shen, Yaoyue Kang, Liren Sun, Usha Viswanathan, Hongying Guo, Tianlun Zhou, Xinghong Dai, Jinhong Chang, Jiming Zhang, Ju-Tao Guo
J.-H. James Ou, Editor
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02399-20
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ABSTRACT
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) small (S) envelope protein has the intrinsic ability to direct the formation of small spherical subviral particles (SVPs) in eukaryotic cells. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the morphogenesis of SVPs from the monomeric S protein initially synthesized at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane remains largely elusive. Structure prediction and extensive mutagenesis analysis suggested that the amino acid residues spanning W156 to R169 of S protein form an amphipathic alpha helix and play essential roles in SVP production and S protein metabolic stability. Further biochemical analyses showed that the putative amphipathic alpha helix was not required for the disulfide-linked S protein oligomerization but was essential for SVP morphogenesis. Pharmacological disruption of vesicle trafficking between the ER and Golgi complex in SVP-producing cells supported the hypothesis that S protein-directed SVP morphogenesis takes place at the ER-Golgi intermediate compartment (ERGIC). Moreover, it was demonstrated that S protein is degraded in hepatocytes via a 20S proteasome-dependent but ubiquitination-independent nonclassic ER-associated degradation pathway. Taken together, the results reported here favor a model in which the amphipathic alpha helix at the antigenic loop of S protein attaches to the lumen leaflet to facilitate SVP budding from the ERGIC, whereas the failure of the budding process may result in S protein degradation by 20S proteasome in a ubiquitination-independent manner.
IMPORTANCE SVPs are the predominant viral product produced by HBV-infected hepatocytes. Their levels exceed those of virion particles by 10,000- to 100,000-fold in the blood of HBV-infected individuals. The high levels of SVPs, or HBV surface antigen (HBsAg), in the circulation induce immune tolerance and contribute to the establishment of persistent HBV infection. The loss of HBsAg, often accompanied by the appearance of anti-HBsAg antibodies, is the hallmark of durable immune control of HBV infection. Therapeutic induction of HBsAg loss is thus considered to be essential for the restoration of the host antiviral immune response and functional cure of chronic hepatitis B. Our findings on the mechanism of SVP morphogenesis and S protein metabolism will facilitate the rational discovery and development of antiviral drugs to achieve this therapeutic goal.