Marseilleviridae is a family of the new order of giant viruses, which exhibit a characteristic inner membrane. Here, we investigated the entire structure of tokyovirus, a species of Marseillevirus at 7.7 Å resolution using 1 MV high-voltage cryo-EM and single particle analysis. The minor capsid lattice formed by five proteins, shows a novel structure compared to other icosahedral giant viruses. Under the minor capsid proteins, scaffold proteins connect two five-fold vertices and interact with the inner membrane. Previously reported giant viruses utilise ″tape measure″ proteins, proposed to control its capsid size, which could not be identified in tokyovirus, but scaffold proteins appear to perform a similar role. A density on top of the major capsid protein was identified, which suggested to be a 14kDa glycoprotein. Our observations suggest that the icosahedral particle of Marseilleviridae is constructed with a novel capsid protein network, which allows the characteristic inner membrane structure.
Marseilleviridae is a family of giant viruses, showing a characteristic internal membrane with extrusions underneath the icosahedral vertices. However, such large objects, with a maximum diameter of 250 nm are technically difficult to examine at sub-nanometre resolution by cryo-electron microscopy. Here, we tested the utility of 1 MV high-voltage cryo-EM (cryo-HVEM) for single particle structural analysis (SPA) of giant viruses using tokyovirus, a species of Marseilleviridae, and revealed the capsid structure at 7.7 Å resolution. The capsid enclosing the viral DNA consisted primarily of four layers: (1) major capsid proteins (MCPs) and penton proteins, (2) minor capsid proteins (mCPs), (3) scaffold protein components (ScPCs), and (4) internal membrane. The mCPs showed a novel capsid lattice consisting of eight protein components. ScPCs connecting the icosahedral vertices supported the formation of the membrane extrusions, and possibly act like tape measure proteins reported in other giant viruses. The density on top of the MCP trimer was suggested to include glycoproteins. This is the first attempt at cryo-HVEM SPA. We found the primary limitations to be the lack of automated data acquisition and software support for collection and processing and thus achievable resolution. However, the results pave the way for using cryo-HVEM for structural analysis of larger biological specimens.
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