Norman R Watts

Universiteit Utrecht, Utrecht, Provincie Utrecht, Netherlands

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Publications (19)108.92 Total impact

  • Article: Epitope-distal Effects Accompany the Binding of Two Distinct Antibodies to Hepatitis B Virus Capsids.
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    ABSTRACT: Infection of humans by hepatitis B virus (HBV) induces the copious production of antibodies directed against the capsid protein (Cp). A large variety of anticapsid antibodies have been identified that differ in their epitopes. These data, and the status of the capsid as a major clinical antigen, motivate studies to achieve a more detailed understanding of their interactions. In this study, we focused on the Fab fragments of two monoclonal antibodies, E1 and 3120. E1 has been shown to bind to the side of outward-protruding spikes whereas 3120 binds to the "floor" region of the capsid, between spikes. We used hydrogen-deuterium exchange coupled to mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) to investigate the effects on HBV capsids of binding these antibodies. Conventionally, capsids loaded with saturating amounts of Fabs would be too massive to be readily amenable to HDX-MS. However, by focusing on the Cp protein, we were able to acquire deuterium uptake profiles covering the entire 149-residue sequence and reveal, in localized detail, changes in H/D exchange rates accompanying antibody binding. We find increased protection of the known E1 and 3120 epitopes on the capsid upon binding and show that regions distant from the epitopes are also affected. In particular, the α2a helix (residues 24-34) and the mobile C-terminus (residues 141-149) become substantially less solvent-exposed. Our data indicate that even at substoichiometric antibody binding an overall increase in the rigidity of the capsid is elicited, as well as a general dampening of its breathing motions.
    Journal of the American Chemical Society 04/2013; · 9.91 Impact Factor
  • Article: Antigenic Switching of Hepatitis B Virus by Alternative Dimerization of the Capsid Protein.
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    ABSTRACT: Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection afflicts millions worldwide with cirrhosis and liver cancer. HBV e-antigen (HBeAg), a clinical marker for disease severity, is a nonparticulate variant of the protein (core antigen, HBcAg) that forms the building-blocks of capsids. HBeAg is not required for virion production, but is implicated in establishing immune tolerance and chronic infection. Here, we report the crystal structure of HBeAg, which clarifies how the short N-terminal propeptide of HBeAg induces a radically altered mode of dimerization relative to HBcAg (∼140° rotation), locked into place through formation of intramolecular disulfide bridges. This structural switch precludes capsid assembly and engenders a distinct antigenic repertoire, explaining why the two antigens are cross-reactive at the T cell level (through sequence identity) but not at the B cell level (through conformation). The structure offers insight into how HBeAg may establish immune tolerance for HBcAg while evading its robust immunogenicity.
    Structure 12/2012; · 6.35 Impact Factor
  • Article: Specificity of an anti-capsid antibody associated with Hepatitis B Virus-related acute liver failure.
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    ABSTRACT: Previously, the livers of patients suffering from acute liver failure (ALF), a potentially fatal syndrome arising from infection by Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), were found to contain massive amounts of an antibody specific for the core antigen (HBcAg) capsid. We have used cryo-electron microscopy and molecular modeling to define its epitope. HBV capsids are icosahedral shells with 25Å-long dimeric spikes, each a 4-helix bundle, protruding from the contiguous "floor". Of the anti-HBcAg antibodies previously characterized, most bind around the spike tip while one binds to the floor. The ALF-associated antibody binds tangentially to a novel site on the side of the spike. This epitope is conformational. The Fab binds with high affinity to its principal determinants but has lower affinities for quasi-equivalent variants. The highest occupancy site is on one side of a spike, with no detectable binding to the corresponding site on the other side. Binding of one Fab per dimer was also observed by analytical ultracentrifugation. The Fab did not bind to the e-antigen dimer, a non-assembling variant of capsid protein. These findings support the propositions that antibodies with particular specificities may correlate with different clinical expressions of HBV infection and that antibodies directed to particular HBcAg epitopes may be involved in ALF pathogenesis.
    Journal of Structural Biology 10/2012; · 3.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cryo-EM study of Hepatitis B virus core antigen capsids decorated with antibodies from a human patient.
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    ABSTRACT: The capsid (core antigen, HBcAg) is one of three major antigens present in patients infected with Hepatitis B virus. The capsids are icosahedral particles, whose most prominent features are spikes that extend 25 Å out from the contiguous "floor". At the spike tip are two copies of the "immunodominant loop". Previously, the epitopes of seven murine monoclonal antibodies have been identified by cryo-EM analysis of Fab-labeled capsids. All but one are conformational and all but one map around the spike tip. The exception, which is also the tightest-binder, straddles an inter-molecular interface on the floor. Seeking to relate these observations to the immunological response of infected humans, we isolated anti-cAg antibodies from a patient, prepared Fabs, and analyzed their binding to capsids. A priori, one possibility was that many different Fabs would give an undifferentiated continuum of Fab-related density. In fact, the density observed was highly differentiated and could be reproduced by modeling with just five Fabs, three binding to the spike and two to the floor. These results show that epitopes on the floor, far (~30 Å) from the immunodominant loop, are clinically relevant and that murine anti-cAg antibodies afford a good model for the human system.
    Journal of Structural Biology 10/2011; 177(1):145-51. · 3.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Role of the propeptide in controlling conformation and assembly state of hepatitis B virus e-antigen.
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    ABSTRACT: Hepatitis B virus "e-antigen" (HBeAg) is thought to be a soluble dimeric protein that is associated with chronic infection. It shares 149 residues with the viral capsid protein "core-antigen" (HBcAg), but has an additional 10-residue, hydrophobic, cysteine-containing amino-terminal propeptide whose presence correlates with physical, serological, and immunological differences between the two proteins. In HBcAg dimers, the subunits pair by forming a four-helix bundle stabilized by an intermolecular disulfide bond. The structure of HBeAg is probably similar but, instead, has two intramolecular disulfide bonds involving the propeptide. To compare the proteins directly and thereby clarify the role of the propeptide, we identified mutations and solution conditions that render both proteins as either soluble dimers or assembled capsids. Thermally induced unfolding monitored by circular dichroism, and electrophoresis of oxidized and reduced dimers, showed that the propeptide has a destabilizing effect and that the intramolecular disulfide bond forms preferentially and blocks the formation of the intermolecular disulfide bond that otherwise stabilizes the dimer. The HBeAg capsids are less regular than the HBcAg capsids; nevertheless, cryo-electron microscopy reconstructions confirm that they are constructed of dimers resembling those of HBcAg capsids. In them, a portion of the propeptide is visible near the dimer interface, suggesting that it intercalates there, consistent with the known formation of a disulfide bond between C(-7) in the propeptide and C61 in the dimer interface. However, this intercalation distorts the dimer into an assembly-reluctant conformation.
    Journal of Molecular Biology 04/2011; 409(2):202-13. · 4.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Subunit exchange rates in Hepatitis B virus capsids are geometry- and temperature-dependent.
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    ABSTRACT: Native tandem mass spectrometry reveals marked differences in the rates at which the two polymorphic forms of the HBV capsid exchange dimeric subunits with the soluble pool.
    Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 11/2010; 12(41):13368-71. · 3.57 Impact Factor
  • Article: Molecular basis for the high degree of antigenic cross-reactivity between hepatitis B virus capsids (HBcAg) and dimeric capsid-related protein (HBeAg): insights into the enigmatic nature of the e-antigen.
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    ABSTRACT: The hepatitis B virus core gene codes for two closely related antigens: a 21-kDa protein that forms dimers that assemble as multimegadalton capsids, and a 17-kDa protein that also forms dimers but that do not assemble. The proteins, respectively referred to as core antigen (HBcAg) and e-antigen (HBeAg), share a sequence of 149 residues but have different amino- and carboxy-termini. Their structural and serological relationship has long been unclear. With insights gained from recent structural studies on immune complexes of the capsids, the relationship was reassessed using recombinant forms of the antigens and a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) commonly believed to discriminate between core and e-antigen. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) was used to measure the affinities, in contrast to previous studies that used more error-prone and less sensitive plate-type assays. Four of the six mAbs did not discriminate between core and e-antigen, nor did they discriminate between e-antigen and dimers of dissociated core antigen capsids. One mAb (3120) was specific for assembled capsids and one (e6) was specific for unassembled dimers. Epitope valency of the e-antigen was also studied, using a sandwich SPR assay where e-antigen was captured with one mAb and probed with a second. The e-antigen is often considered to be a monomeric protein on the basis of monovalent reactivity with antibody pairs specific for either an alpha or beta epitope (in a prior nomenclature for e-antigen specificity). This model, however, is incorrect, because recombinant e-antigen is a stable dimer and its apparent monovalency is due to steric blockage. This was proven by the formation of a 2:1 Fab e6-e-antigen complex. These results suggest new approaches for the isolation of the authentic e-antigen, its biological assay, and its stabilization as an immune complex for structural studies.
    Journal of Molecular Biology 03/2010; 398(4):530-41. · 4.00 Impact Factor
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    Article: Implications of the HIV-1 Rev dimer structure at 3.2 A resolution for multimeric binding to the Rev response element.
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    ABSTRACT: HIV-1 Rev is a small regulatory protein that mediates the nuclear export of viral mRNAs, an essential step in the HIV replication cycle. In this process Rev oligomerizes in association with a highly structured RNA motif, the Rev response element. Crystallographic studies of Rev have been hampered by the protein's tendency to aggregate, but Rev has now been found to form a stable soluble equimolar complex with a specifically engineered monoclonal Fab fragment. We have determined the structure of this complex at 3.2 A resolution. It reveals a molecular dimer of Rev, bound on either side by a Fab, where the ordered portion of each Rev monomer (residues 9-65) contains two coplanar alpha-helices arranged in hairpin fashion. Subunits dimerize through overlapping of the hairpin prongs. Mating of hydrophobic patches on the outer surface of the dimer is likely to promote higher order interactions, suggesting a model for Rev oligomerization onto the viral RNA.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 03/2010; 107(13):5810-4. · 9.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Generation and characterization of a chimeric rabbit/human Fab for co-crystallization of HIV-1 Rev.
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    ABSTRACT: Rev is a key regulatory protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Its function is to bind to viral transcripts and effect export from the nucleus of unspliced mRNA, thereby allowing the synthesis of structural proteins. Despite its evident importance, the structure of Rev has remained unknown, primarily because Rev's proclivity for polymerization and aggregation is an impediment to crystallization. Monoclonal antibody antigen-binding domains (Fabs) have proven useful for the co-crystallization of other refractory proteins. In the present study, a chimeric rabbit/human anti-Rev Fab was selected by phage display, expressed in a bacterial secretion system, and purified from the media. The Fab readily solubilized polymeric Rev. The resulting Fab/Rev complex was purified by metal ion affinity chromatography and characterized by analytical ultracentrifugation, which demonstrated monodispersity and indicated a 1:1 molar stoichiometry. The Fab binds with very high affinity, as determined by surface plasmon resonance, to a conformational epitope in the N-terminal half of Rev. The complex forms crystals suitable for structure determination. The ability to serve as a crystallization aid is a new application of broad utility for chimeric rabbit/human Fab. The corresponding single-chain antibody (scFv) was also prepared, offering the potential of intracellular antibody therapeutics against human immunodeficiency virus type 1.
    Journal of Molecular Biology 02/2010; 397(3):697-708. · 4.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Inside Cover: Stability and Shape of Hepatitis B Virus Capsids In Vacuo (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 33/2008).
    Angewandte Chemie International Edition 09/2008; 47(33):6090. · 13.45 Impact Factor
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    Article: High-resolution mass spectrometry of viral assemblies: molecular composition and stability of dimorphic hepatitis B virus capsids.
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    ABSTRACT: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major human pathogen. In addition to its importance in human health, there is growing interest in adapting HBV and other viruses for drug delivery and other nanotechnological applications. In both contexts, precise biophysical characterization of these large macromolecular particles is fundamental. HBV capsids are unusual in that they exhibit two distinct icosahedral geometries, nominally composed of 90 and 120 dimers with masses of approximately 3 and approximately 4 MDa, respectively. Here, a mass spectrometric approach was used to determine the masses of both capsids to within 0.1%. It follows that both lattices are complete, consisting of exactly 180 and 240 subunits. Nanoindentation experiments by atomic-force microscopy indicate that both capsids have similar stabilities. The data yielded a Young's modulus of approximately 0.4 GPa. This experimental approach, anchored on very precise and accurate mass measurements, appears to hold considerable potential for elucidating the assembly of viruses and other macromolecular particles.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 08/2008; 105(27):9216-20. · 9.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Stability and Shape of Hepatitis B Virus Capsids In Vacuo
    Angewandte Chemie 07/2008; 120(33):6343 - 6347.
  • Article: Non-canonical binding of an antibody resembling a naïve B cell receptor immunoglobulin to hepatitis B virus capsids.
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    ABSTRACT: The hepatitis B virus capsid (core antigen) is able to bind to and activate naïve B cells and these become efficient primary antigen-presenting cells for the priming of T cells. We have investigated this interaction by using cryo-electron microscopy, three-dimensional image reconstruction, and molecular modeling to visualize capsids decorated with Fab fragments of a receptor immunoglobulin, and surface plasmon resonance to measure the binding affinity. By both criteria, the mode of binding differs from those of the six monoclonal anti-core antigen antibodies previously characterized. The Fab interacts with two sites approximately 30 A apart. One interaction is canonical, whereby the CDR loops engage the tip of one of the 25 A spikes that protrude from the capsid surface. The second interaction is non-canonical; in it, the Fab framework contacts the tip of an adjacent spike. The binding affinity of this Fab for capsids, K(D) approximately 4 x 10(-7) M, is relatively low for an antibody-antigen interaction, but is approximately 150-fold lower still ( approximately 2.5 x 10(-5) M) for unassembled capsid protein dimers. The latter observation indicates that both of the observed interactions are required to achieve stable binding of capsids by this receptor immunoglobulin. Considerations of conserved sequence motifs in other such molecules suggest that other naïve B cells may interact with HBV capsids in much the same way.
    Journal of Molecular Biology 07/2008; 379(5):1119-29. · 4.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Stability and shape of hepatitis B virus capsids in vacuo.
    Angewandte Chemie International Edition 01/2008; 47(33):6247-51. · 13.45 Impact Factor
  • Article: Structure, assembly, and antigenicity of hepatitis B virus capsid proteins.
    Advances in Virus Research 02/2005; 64:125-64. · 3.97 Impact Factor
  • Article: The cryptophycin-tubulin ring structure indicates two points of curvature in the tubulin dimer.
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    ABSTRACT: Cryptophycin-1 is the parent compound of a group of cyclic peptides with potent antineoplastic activity. Cryptophycins are thought to function by modulating the dynamic instability of spindle microtubules, and in vitro are known to bind in an equimolar ratio to the beta-tubulin subunit and to induce the formation of ring-like complexes. However, the detailed mechanisms whereby the cryptophycins interact with tubulin are not known. We have investigated the origin of the conformational changes in tubulin both biochemically and by electron microscopy and image analysis. Cryptophycin was found to protect both alpha- and beta-tubulin against proteolysis by trypsin, indicating conformational changes in specific regions of both subunits. The ring mass was determined to be approximately 0.81 MDa by sedimentation velocity combined with dynamic light scattering and by STEM, indicating a complex of eight alphabeta dimers. Statistical analysis of rings imaged by cryoelectron microscopy revealed 16-fold symmetry, corresponding to eight dimers. Computational averaging based on this symmetry yielded an image of a 24 nm diameter ring, at 2.6 nm resolution, that clearly distinguishes intradimer contacts from interdimer contacts, and allows discrimination of alpha-subunits from beta-subunits. Fitting of the tubulin dimer crystal structure into this projected density map indicates two points of curvature: a 13 degrees intradimer bend and a 32 degrees interdimer bend. We conclude that drug binding to one subunit (beta) results in two bends per dimer, affecting both subunits.
    Biochemistry 11/2002; 41(42):12662-9. · 3.42 Impact Factor
  • Article: The morphogenic linker peptide of HBV capsid protein forms a mobile array on the interior surface.
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    ABSTRACT: Many capsid proteins have peptides that influence their assembly. In hepatitis B virus capsid protein, the peptide STLPETTVV, linking the shell-forming 'core' domain and the nucleic acid-binding 'protamine' domain, has such a role. We have studied its morphogenic properties by permuting its sequence, substituting it with an extraneous peptide, deleting it to directly fuse the core and protamine domains and assembling core domain dimers with added linker peptides. The peptide was found to be necessary for the assembly of protamine domain-containing capsids, although its size-determining effect tolerates some modifications. Although largely invisible in a capsid crystal structure, we could visualize linker peptides by cryo-EM difference imaging: they emerge on the inner surface and extend from the capsid protein dimer interface towards the adjacent symmetry axis. A closely sequence-similar peptide in cellobiose dehydrogenase, which has an extended conformation, offers a plausible prototype. We propose that linker peptides are attached to the capsid inner surface as hinged struts, forming a mobile array, an arrangement with implications for morphogenesis and the management of encapsidated nucleic acid.
    The EMBO Journal 04/2002; 21(5):876-84. · 9.20 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cryo-electron microscopy of trichocyte (hard alpha-keratin) intermediate filaments reveals a low-density core.
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    ABSTRACT: Trichocyte intermediate filaments (IF) are the principal components of epidermal appendages such as hair and nail. Based on studies by a variety of techniques, it has been inferred that trichocyte IF are structurally similar to other kinds of IF. However, some basic structural attributes have yet to be established: in particular, it has remained unclear whether IF are hollow. We have examined trichocyte IF isolated from rat vibrissae and human hair follicles by electron microscopy. Scanning transmission electron microscopy of freeze-dried specimens yielded mass-per-unit-length values of approximately 32 kDa/nm, with the human preparations also containing filaments at half this density, corresponding to two rather than four protofibrils. Radial density profiles calculated from cryo-electron micrographs of vitrified specimens preserved in a near-native state revealed a low-density region of approximately 3 nm diameter around the filament axis. A minor species of filament with the same internal structure was surface-decorated with material arranged with a helical pitch length of 9.3 nm. These filaments appear to represent IF coated with associated proteins-perhaps, "high-sulfur" proteins-readied for incorporation into the filament-matrix biocomposite of the mature hair.
    Journal of Structural Biology 137(1-2):109-18. · 3.41 Impact Factor
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    Article: Cryo-Electron Microscopy of Trichocyte (Hard α-Keratin) Intermediate Filaments Reveals a Low-Density Core
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    ABSTRACT: Trichocyte intermediate filaments (IF) are the principal components of epidermal appendages such as hair and nail. Based on studies by a variety of techniques, it has been inferred that trichocyte IF are structurally similar to other kinds of IF. However, some basic structural attributes have yet to be established: in particular, it has remained unclear whether IF are hollow. We have examined trichocyte IF isolated from rat vibrissae and human hair follicles by electron microscopy. Scanning transmission electron microscopy of freeze-dried specimens yielded mass-per-unit-length values of ∼32 kDa/nm, with the human preparations also containing filaments at half this density, corresponding to two rather than four protofibrils. Radial density profiles calculated from cryo-electron micrographs of vitrified specimens preserved in a near-native state revealed a low-density region of ∼3 nm diameter around the filament axis. A minor species of filament with the same internal structure was surface-decorated with material arranged with a helical pitch length of 9.3 nm. These filaments appear to represent IF coated with associated proteins—perhaps, “high-sulfur” proteins—readied for incorporation into the filament-matrix biocomposite of the mature hair.
    Journal of Structural Biology.