Evidence for a coiled-coil structure in the spike proteins of coronaviruses
Publication date
1987-08-20
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Abstract
The amino acid sequences of the spike proteins from three distantly related coronaviruses have been deduced from cDNA sequences. In the C-terminal half, an homology of about 30% was found, while there was no detectable sequence conservation in the N-terminal regions. Hydrophobic "heptad" repeat patterns indicated the presence of two α-helices with predicted lengths of 100 and 50 Å, respectively. It is suggested that, in the spike oligomer. these α-helices form a complex coiled-coil, resembling the supersecondary structures in two other elongated membrane proteins, the haemagglutinin of influenza virus and the variable surface glycoprotein of trypanosomes.
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Virology
Citation
de Groot, R J, Luytjes, W, Horzinek, M C, van der Zeijst, B A M, Spaan, W J M & Lenstra, J A 1987, 'Evidence for a coiled-coil structure in the spike proteins of coronaviruses', Journal of Molecular Biology, vol. 196, no. 4, pp. 963-966. https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-2836(87)90422-0