Engineering Metastability into a Virus-like Particle to Enable Triggered Dissociation.
Caleb A StarrSmita NairSheng-Yuan HuangMichael Francis HaganStephen C JacobsonAdam ZlotnickPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
For a virus-like particle (VLP) to serve as a delivery platform, the VLP must be able to release its cargo in response to a trigger. Here, we use a chemical biology approach to destabilize a self-assembling capsid for a subsequent triggered disassembly. We redesigned the dimeric hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid protein (Cp) with two differentially addressable cysteines, C150 for reversibly crosslinking the capsid and C124 to react with a destabilizing moiety. The resulting construct, Cp150-V124C, assembles into icosahedral, 120-dimer VLPs that spontaneously crosslink via the C-terminal C150, leaving C124 buried at a dimer-dimer interface. The VLP is driven into a metastable state when C124 is reacted with the bulky fluorophore, maleimidyl BoDIPY-FL. The resulting VLP is stable until exposed to modest, physiologically relevant concentrations of reducing agent. We observe dissociation with FRET relaxation of polarization, size exclusion chromatography, and resistive-pulse sensing. Dissociation is slow, minutes to hours, with a characteristic lag phase. Mathematical modeling based on the presence of a nucleation step predicts disassembly dynamics that are consistent with experimental observations. VLPs transfected into hepatoma cells show similar dissociation behavior. These results suggest a generalizable strategy for designing a VLP that can release its contents in an environmentally responsive reaction.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis b virus
- electron transfer
- fluorescent probe
- liver failure
- single molecule
- induced apoptosis
- living cells
- mass spectrometry
- blood pressure
- cell cycle arrest
- high throughput
- cell proliferation
- high speed
- tandem mass spectrometry
- binding protein
- cell death
- high performance liquid chromatography
- high resolution
- drug delivery
- small molecule
- ms ms
- energy transfer