9N41 image
Deposition Date 2025-02-01
Release Date 2025-08-06
Last Version Date 2025-08-27
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
9N41
Title:
MS2-pcoat Icosahedral Reconstruction
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
2.20 Å
Aggregation State:
PARTICLE
Reconstruction Method:
SINGLE PARTICLE
Macromolecular Entities
Structures with similar UniProt ID
Protein Blast
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Capsid protein
Chain IDs:A, B, C
Chain Length:129
Number of Molecules:3
Biological Source:Escherichia phage MS2
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
Measuring the selective packaging of RNA molecules by viral coat proteins in cells.
Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA 122 e2505190122 e2505190122 (2025)
PMID: 40789029 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2505190122

Abstact

Some RNA viruses package their genomes with extraordinary selectivity, assembling protein capsids around their own viral RNA while excluding nearly all host RNA. How the assembling proteins distinguish viral RNA from host RNA is not fully understood, but RNA structure is thought to play a key role. To test this idea, we perform in-cellulo packaging experiments using bacteriophage MS2 coat proteins and a variety of RNA molecules in Escherichia coli. In each experiment, plasmid-derived RNA molecules with a specified sequence compete against the cellular transcriptome for packaging by plasmid-derived coat proteins. Following this competition, we quantify the total amount and relative composition of the packaged RNA using electron microscopy, interferometric scattering microscopy, and high-throughput sequencing. By systematically varying the input RNA sequence and measuring changes in packaging outcomes, we are able to directly test competing models of selective packaging. Our results rule out a longstanding model in which selective packaging requires the well-known translational repressor (TR) stem-loop, and instead support more recent models in which selectivity emerges from the collective interactions of multiple coat proteins and multiple stem-loops distributed across the RNA molecule. These findings establish a framework for studying and understanding selective packaging in a range of natural viruses and virus-like particles, and lay the groundwork for engineering synthetic systems that package specific RNA cargoes.

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Primary Citation of related structures