posted on 2024-08-01, 14:10authored byTariq Hussain, Zhongchao Zhao, Brennan Murphy, Zachary E. Taylor, Jessica A. Gudorf, Shelby Klein, Lauren F. Barnes, Michael VanNieuwenhze, Martin F. Jarrold, Adam Zlotnick
Virus-like particles (VLPs) have untapped potential for
packaging
and delivery of macromolecular cargo. To be a broadly useful platform,
there needs to be a strategy for attaching macromolecules to the inside
or the outside of the VLP with minimal modification of the platform
or cargo. Here, we repurpose antiviral compounds that bind to hepatitis
B virus (HBV) capsids to create a chemical tag to noncovalently attach
cargo to the VLP. Our tag consists of a capsid assembly modulator,
HAP13, connected to a linker terminating in maleimide. Our cargo is
a green fluorescent protein (GFP) with a single addressable cysteine,
a feature that can be engineered in many proteins. The HAP-GFP construct
maintained HAP’s intrinsic ability to bind HBV capsids and
accelerate assembly. We investigated the capacity of HAP-GFP to coassemble
with HBV capsid protein and bind to preassembled capsids. HAP-GFP
binding was concentration-dependent, sensitive to capsid stability,
and dependent on linker length. Long linkers had the greatest activity
to bind capsids, while short linkers impeded assembly and damaged
intact capsids. In coassembly reactions, >20 HAP-GFP molecules
were
presented on the outside and inside of the capsid, concentrating the
cargo by more than 100-fold compared to bulk solution. We also tested
an HAP-GFP with a cleavable linker so that external GFP molecules
could be removed, resulting in exclusive internal packaging. These
results demonstrate a generalizable strategy for attaching cargo to
a VLP, supporting development of HBV as a modular VLP platform.