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Dive into the research topics where Anthony J. Battisti is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony J. Battisti.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2008

Binding of a neutralizing antibody to dengue virus alters the arrangement of surface glycoproteins.

Shee-Mei Lok; Kostyuchenko; Grant E. Nybakken; Heather A. Holdaway; Anthony J. Battisti; S Sukupolvi-Petty; Dagmar Sedlak; Daved H. Fremont; Paul R. Chipman; John T. Roehrig; Michael S. Diamond; Richard J. Kuhn; Michael G. Rossmann

The monoclonal antibody 1A1D-2 has been shown to strongly neutralize dengue virus serotypes 1, 2 and 3, primarily by inhibiting attachment to host cells. A crystal structure of its antigen binding fragment (Fab) complexed with domain III of the viral envelope glycoprotein, E, showed that the epitope would be partially occluded in the known structure of the mature dengue virus. Nevertheless, antibody could bind to the virus at 37 °C, suggesting that the virus is in dynamic motion making hidden epitopes briefly available. A cryo-electron microscope image reconstruction of the virus:Fab complex showed large changes in the organization of the E protein that exposed the epitopes on two of the three E molecules in each of the 60 icosahedral asymmetric units of the virus. The changes in the structure of the viral surface are presumably responsible for inhibiting attachment to cells.


Cell | 2006

Cryo-EM reconstruction of dengue virus in complex with the carbohydrate recognition domain of DC-SIGN.

Elena Pokidysheva; Ying Zhang; Anthony J. Battisti; Carol M. Bator-Kelly; Paul R. Chipman; Chuan Xiao; Glenn Gregorio; Wayne A. Hendrickson; Richard J. Kuhn; Michael G. Rossmann

Dengue virus (DENV) is a significant human pathogen that causes millions of infections and results in about 24,000 deaths each year. Dendritic cell-specific ICAM3 grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN), abundant in immature dendritic cells, was previously reported as being an ancillary receptor interacting with the surface of DENV. The structure of DENV in complex with the carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) of DC-SIGN was determined by cryo-electron microscopy at 25 A resolution. One CRD monomer was found to bind to two glycosylation sites at Asn67 of two neighboring glycoproteins in each icosahedral asymmetric unit, leaving the third Asn67 residue vacant. The vacancy at the third Asn67 site is a result of the nonequivalence of the glycoprotein environments, leaving space for the primary receptor binding to domain III of E. The use of carbohydrate moieties for receptor binding sites suggests a mechanism for avoiding immune surveillance.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Structural changes of bacteriophage φ29 upon DNA packaging and release

Ye Xiang; Marc C. Morais; Anthony J. Battisti; Shelley Grimes; Paul J. Jardine; Dwight L. Anderson; Michael G. Rossmann

Cryo‐electron microscopy three‐dimensional reconstructions have been made of mature and of emptied bacteriophage ϕ29 particles without making symmetry assumptions. Comparisons of these structures with each other and with the ϕ29 prohead indicate how conformational changes might initiate successive steps of assembly and infection. The 12 adsorption capable ‘appendages’ were found to have a structure homologous to the bacteriophage P22 tailspikes. Two of the appendages are extended radially outwards, away from the long axis of the virus, whereas the others are around and parallel to the phage axis. The appendage orientations are correlated with the symmetry‐mismatched positions of the five‐fold related head fibers, suggesting a mechanism for partial cell wall digestion upon rotation of the head about the tail when initiating infection. The narrow end of the head‐tail connector is expanded in the mature virus. Gene product 3, bound to the 5′ ends of the genome, appears to be positioned within the expanded connector, which may potentiate the release of DNA‐packaging machine components, creating a binding site for attachment of the tail.


EMBO Reports | 2011

Maturation of flaviviruses starts from one or more icosahedrally independent nucleation centres

Pavel Plevka; Anthony J. Battisti; Jiraphan Junjhon; Dennis C. Winkler; Heather A. Holdaway; Poonsook Keelapang; Nopporn Sittisombut; Richard J. Kuhn; Alasdair C. Steven; Michael G. Rossmann

Flaviviruses assemble as fusion‐incompetent immature particles and subsequently undergo conformational change leading to release of infectious virions. Flavivirus infections also produce combined ‘mosaic’ particles. Here, using cryo‐electron tomography, we report that mosaic particles of dengue virus type 2 had glycoproteins organized into two regions of mature and immature structure. Furthermore, particles of a maturation‐deficient mutant had their glycoproteins organized into two regions of immature structure with mismatching icosahedral symmetries. It is therefore apparent that the maturation‐related reorganization of the flavivirus glycoproteins is not synchronized across the whole virion, but is initiated from one or more nucleation centres. Similar deviation from icosahedral symmetry might be relevant to the asymmetrical mode of genome packaging and cell entry of other viruses.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Asymmetric binding of transferrin receptor to parvovirus capsids

Susan Hafenstein; Laura M. Palermo; Victor A. Kostyuchenko; Chuan Xiao; Marc C. Morais; Christian D. S. Nelson; Valorie D. Bowman; Anthony J. Battisti; Paul R. Chipman; Colin R. Parrish; Michael G. Rossmann

Although many viruses are icosahedral when they initially bind to one or more receptor molecules on the cell surface, such an interaction is asymmetric, probably causing a breakdown in the symmetry and conformation of the original infecting virion in preparation for membrane penetration and release of the viral genome. Cryoelectron microscopy and biochemical analyses show that transferrin receptor, the cellular receptor for canine parvovirus, can bind to only one or a few of the 60 icosahedrally equivalent sites on the virion, indicating that either canine parvovirus has inherent asymmetry or binding of receptor induces asymmetry. The asymmetry of receptor binding to canine parvovirus is reminiscent of the special portal in tailed bacteriophages and some large, icosahedral viruses. Asymmetric interactions of icosahedral viruses with their hosts might be a more common phenomenon than previously thought and may have been obscured by averaging in previous crystallographic and electron microscopic structure determinations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Structure and assembly of a paramyxovirus matrix protein

Anthony J. Battisti; Geng Meng; Dennis C. Winkler; Lori W. McGinnes; Pavel Plevka; Alasdair C. Steven; Trudy G. Morrison; Michael G. Rossmann

Many pleomorphic, lipid-enveloped viruses encode matrix proteins that direct their assembly and budding, but the mechanism of this process is unclear. We have combined X-ray crystallography and cryoelectron tomography to show that the matrix protein of Newcastle disease virus, a paramyxovirus and relative of measles virus, forms dimers that assemble into pseudotetrameric arrays that generate the membrane curvature necessary for virus budding. We show that the glycoproteins are anchored in the gaps between the matrix proteins and that the helical nucleocapsids are associated in register with the matrix arrays. About 90% of virions lack matrix arrays, suggesting that, in agreement with previous biological observations, the matrix protein needs to dissociate from the viral membrane during maturation, as is required for fusion and release of the nucleocapsid into the host’s cytoplasm. Structure and sequence conservation imply that other paramyxovirus matrix proteins function similarly.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Structural Studies of Hantaan Virus

Anthony J. Battisti; Yong Kyu Chu; Paul R. Chipman; Bärbel Kaufmann; Colleen B. Jonsson; Michael G. Rossmann

ABSTRACT Hantaan virus is the prototypic member of the Hantavirus genus within the family Bunyaviridae and is a causative agent of the potentially fatal hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome. The Bunyaviridae are a family of negative-sense RNA viruses with three-part segmented genomes. Virions are enveloped and decorated with spikes derived from a pair of glycoproteins (Gn and Gc). Here, we present cryo-electron tomography and single-particle cryo-electron microscopy studies of Hantaan virus virions. We have determined the structure of the tetrameric Gn-Gc spike complex to a resolution of 2.5 nm and show that spikes are ordered in lattices on the virion surface. Large cytoplasmic extensions associated with each Gn-Gc spike also form a lattice on the inner surface of the viral membrane. Rod-shaped ribonucleoprotein complexes are arranged into nearly parallel pairs and triplets within virions. Our results differ from the T=12 icosahedral organization found for some bunyaviruses. However, a comparison of our results with the previous tomographic studies of the nonpathogenic Tula hantavirus indicates a common structural organization for hantaviruses.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

An icosahedral algal virus has a complex unique vertex decorated by a spike

Mickaël V. Cherrier; Victor A. Kostyuchenko; Chuan Xiao; Valorie D. Bowman; Anthony J. Battisti; Xiaodong Yan; Paul R. Chipman; Timothy S. Baker; James L. Van Etten; Michael G. Rossmann

Paramecium bursaria Chlorella virus-1 is an icosahedrally shaped, 1,900-Å-diameter virus that infects unicellular eukaryotic green algae. A 5-fold symmetric, 3D reconstruction using cryoelectron microscopy images has now shown that the quasiicosahedral virus has a unique vertex, with a pocket on the inside and a spike structure on the outside of the capsid. The pocket might contain enzymes for use in the initial stages of infection. The unique vertex consists of virally coded proteins, some of which have been identified. Comparison of shape, size, and location of the spike with similar features in bacteriophages T4 and P22 suggests that the spike might be a cell-puncturing device. Similar asymmetric features may have been missed in previous analyses of many other viruses that had been assumed to be perfectly icosahedral.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Structural comparison of different antibodies interacting with parvovirus capsids

Susan Hafenstein; Valorie D. Bowman; Tao Sun; Christian D. S. Nelson; Laura M. Palermo; Paul R. Chipman; Anthony J. Battisti; Colin R. Parrish; Michael G. Rossmann

ABSTRACT The structures of canine parvovirus (CPV) and feline parvovirus (FPV) complexed with antibody fragments from eight different neutralizing monoclonal antibodies were determined by cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) reconstruction to resolutions varying from 8.5 to 18 Å. The crystal structure of one of the Fab molecules and the sequence of the variable domain for each of the Fab molecules have been determined. The structures of Fab fragments not determined crystallographically were predicted by homology modeling according to the amino acid sequence. Fitting of the Fab and virus structures into the cryoEM densities identified the footprints of each antibody on the viral surface. As anticipated from earlier analyses, the Fab binding sites are directed to two epitopes, A and B. The A site is on an exposed part of the surface near an icosahedral threefold axis, whereas the B site is about equidistant from the surrounding five-, three-, and twofold axes. One antibody directed to the A site binds CPV but not FPV. Two of the antibodies directed to the B site neutralize the virus as Fab fragments. The differences in antibody properties have been linked to the amino acids within the antibody footprints, the position of the binding site relative to the icosahedral symmetry elements, and the orientation of the Fab structure relative to the surface of the virus. Most of the exposed surface area was antigenic, although each of the antibodies had a common area of overlap that coincided with the positions of the previously mapped escape mutations.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Cryo-Electron Tomography of Rubella Virus

Anthony J. Battisti; Joshua D. Yoder; Pavel Plevka; Dennis C. Winkler; Vidya Mangala Prasad; Richard J. Kuhn; Teryl K. Frey; Alasdair C. Steven; Michael G. Rossmann

ABSTRACT Rubella virus is the only member of the Rubivirus genus within the Togaviridae family and is the causative agent of the childhood disease known as rubella or German measles. Here, we report the use of cryo-electron tomography to examine the three-dimensional structure of rubella virions and compare their structure to that of Ross River virus, a togavirus belonging the genus Alphavirus. The ectodomains of the rubella virus glycoproteins, E1 and E2, are shown to be organized into extended rows of density, separated by 9 nm on the viral surface. We also show that the rubella virus nucleocapsid structure often forms a roughly spherical shell which lacks high density at its center. While many rubella virions are approximately spherical and have dimensions similar to that of the icosahedral Ross River virus, the present results indicate that rubella exhibits a large degree of pleomorphy. In addition, we used rotation function calculations and other analyses to show that approximately spherical rubella virions lack the icosahedral organization which characterizes Ross River and other alphaviruses. The present results indicate that the assembly mechanism of rubella virus, which has previously been shown to differ from that of the alphavirus assembly pathway, leads to an organization of the rubella virus structural proteins that is different from that of alphaviruses.

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Victor A. Kostyuchenko

National University of Singapore

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Dennis C. Winkler

National Institutes of Health

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