Bentley A Fane

Bentley A Fane

Professor, Plant Sciences
Professor, Applied BioSciences - GIDP
Professor, Genetics - GIDP
Professor, Immunobiology
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Primary Department
Department Affiliations
Contact
(520) 626-6634

Work Summary

Upon infection, viruses must transport their genomes into cells and produce progeny, often under a strict time deadline. We study how the viral proteins interact with with each other and with host cell proteins to efficiently accomplish these processes.

Research Interest

Bentley A. Fane, PhD, is a Professor in the School of Plant Sciences, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and holds a joint appointment in the Department of Immunobiology, Arizona College of Medicine. Dr. Fane has an international reputation for his research into virus structure, assembly and evolution. His research focuses on the viruses of the Microviridae, of which he is considered one of the leading experts. He has been instrumental in defining the biochemical and structural parameters that allow these viruses to replicate and produce progeny in as little as five minutes. The rapid lifecycle has facilitated in depth studies into how viruses evolved resistance mechanism to anti-viral proteins targeting particle assembly.He has published over 60 original research paper in leading scientific journals, including Nature, Molecular Cell, and Journal of Virology, in which his publications on the evolution of resistance mechanisms and kinetic traps have been selected by the journal editors as articles of “significant interest.” He is a frequent presenter at national and international meetings, and has been invited to State of the Art and plenary talks at give the American Society for Virology. He presently serves on the Editorial Boards of two leading virology journals: Virology and the Journal of Virology. At the University of Arizona, Dr. Fane has been actively involved in promoting undergraduate research has been honored with teaching awards on the department, college, and university levels. Keywords: Virus structure and assembly, Viral DNA translocation, Viral evolution

Publications

Gordon, E. B., Knuff, C. J., & Fane, B. A. (2012). Conformational switch-defective ΦX174 internal scaffolding proteins kinetically trap assembly intermediates before procapsid formation. Journal of Virology, 86(18), 9911-9918.

PMID: 22761377;PMCID: PMC3446603;Abstract:

Conformational switching is an overarching paradigm in which to describe scaffolding protein-mediated virus assembly. However, rapid morphogenesis with small assembly subunits hinders the isolation of early morphogenetic intermediates in most model systems. Consequently, conformational switches are often defined by comparing the structures of virions, procapsids and aberrantly assembled particles. In contrast, øX174 morphogenesis proceeds through at least three preprocapsid intermediates, which can be biochemically isolated. This affords a detailed analysis of early morphogenesis and internal scaffolding protein function. Amino acid substitutions were generated for the six C-terminal, aromatic amino acids that mediate most coat-internal scaffolding protein contacts. The biochemical characterization of mutant assembly pathways revealed two classes of molecular defects, protein binding and conformational switching, a novel phenotype. The conformational switch mutations kinetically trapped assembly intermediates before procapsid formation. Although mutations trapped different particles, they shared common second-site suppressors located in the viral coat protein. This suggests a fluid assembly pathway, one in which the scaffolding protein induces a single, coat protein conformational switch and not a series of sequential reactions. In this model, an incomplete or improper switch would kinetically trap intermediates. © 2012, American Society for Microbiology.

Fane, B. A., Shien, S., & Hayashi, M. (1993). Second-site suppressors of a cold-sensitive external scaffolding protein of bacteriophage φX174. Genetics, 134(4), 1003-1011.

PMID: 8375644;PMCID: PMC1205568;Abstract:

This report describes the isolation and characterization of second-site suppressors of a cold-sensitive (cs) external scaffolding protein, gpD, of bacteriophage φX174. Seven genetically distinct suppressors were isolated. Six of them are located in gene F which encodes the major coat protein of the virus. The seventh is located in gene J which encodes the DNA-binding protein. A subset of the suppressors are trans-acting. These second-site suppressors do not exhibit allele specificity; they are able to suppress defects associated with a csD protein for which they were not selected. The initial characterization of the second-site suppressors and their locations within the major coat protein suggest that the mechanism of suppression may involve both structural and stoichiometric phenomena.

Everson, J. S., Garner, S. A., Lambden, P. R., Fane, B. A., & Clarke, I. N. (2003). Host Range of Chlamydiaphages φCPAR39 and Chp3. Journal of Bacteriology, 185(21), 6490-6492.

PMID: 14563888;PMCID: PMC219413;Abstract:

The host range of φCPAR39 is limited to four Chlamydophila species: C. abortus, C. caviae, C. pecorum, and C. pneumoniae. Chp3 (a newly discovered bacteriophage isolated from C. pecorum) shares three of these hosts (C. abortus, C. caviae, and C. pecorum) but can additionally infect Chlamydophila felis. The ability to support replication was directly correlated with the binding properties of the respective bacteriophages with their host species. Binding studies also show that φCPAR39 and Chp3 use different host receptors to infect the same host cells: cell binding is sensitive to proteinase K treatment, confirming that the chlamydiaphage receptors are proteinaceous in nature.

Blackburn, B. J., Li, S., Roznowski, A. P., Perez, A. R., Villarreal, R. H., Johnson, C. J., Hardy, M., Tuckerman, E. C., Burch, A. D., & Fane, B. A. (2017). Coat Protein Mutations That Alter the Flux of Morphogenetic Intermediates through the ϕX174 Early Assembly Pathway. Journal of virology, 91(24).

Two scaffolding proteins orchestrate ϕX174 morphogenesis. The internal scaffolding protein B mediates the formation of pentameric assembly intermediates, whereas the external scaffolding protein D organizes 12 of these intermediates into procapsids. Aromatic amino acid side chains mediate most coat-internal scaffolding protein interactions. One residue in the internal scaffolding protein and three in the coat protein constitute the core of the B protein binding cleft. The three coat gene codons were randomized separately to ascertain the chemical requirements of the encoded amino acids and the morphogenetic consequences of mutation. The resulting mutants exhibited a wide range of recessive phenotypes, which could generally be explained within a structural context. Mutants with phenylalanine, tyrosine, and methionine substitutions were phenotypically indistinguishable from the wild type. However, tryptophan substitutions were detrimental at two sites. Charged residues were poorly tolerated, conferring extreme temperature-sensitive and lethal phenotypes. Eighteen lethal and conditional lethal mutants were genetically and biochemically characterized. The primary defect associated with the missense substitutions ranged from inefficient internal scaffolding protein B binding to faulty procapsid elongation reactions mediated by external scaffolding protein D. Elevating B protein concentrations above wild-type levels via exogenous, cloned-gene expression compensated for inefficient B protein binding, as did suppressing mutations within gene B. Similarly, elevating D protein concentrations above wild-type levels or compensatory mutations within gene D suppressed faulty elongation. Some of the parental mutations were pleiotropic, affecting multiple morphogenetic reactions. This progressively reduced the flux of intermediates through the pathway. Accordingly, multiple mechanisms, which may be unrelated, could restore viability.IMPORTANCE Genetic analyses have been instrumental in deciphering the temporal events of many biochemical pathways. However, pleiotropic effects can complicate analyses. Vis-à-vis virion morphogenesis, an improper protein-protein interaction within an early assembly intermediate can influence the efficiency of all subsequent reactions. Consequently, the flux of assembly intermediates cumulatively decreases as the pathway progresses. During morphogenesis, ϕX174 coat protein participates in at least four well-defined reactions, each one characterized by an interaction with a scaffolding or structural protein. In this study, genetic analyses, biochemical characterizations, and physiological assays, i.e., elevating the protein levels with which the coat protein interacts, were used to elucidate pleiotropic effects that may alter the flux of intermediates through a morphogenetic pathway.

Clarke, I. N., Cutcliffe, L. T., Everson, J. S., Garner, S. A., Lambden, P. R., Pead, P. J., Pickett, M. A., Brentlinger, K. L., & Fane, B. A. (2004). Chlamydiaphage Chp2, a skeleton in the φX174 closet: Scaffolding protein and procapsid identification. Journal of Bacteriology, 186(22), 7571-7574.

PMID: 15516569;PMCID: PMC524887;Abstract:

Chlamydiaphage Chp2 is a member of the family Microviridae, of which bacteriophage φX174 is the type species. Although grouped in the same family, the relationship between the Microviridae coliphages and the Chp2-like viruses, which infect obligate intracellular parasitic bacteria, is quite distant, with major differences in structural protein content and scaffolding protein dependence. To investigate the morphogenesis of Chp2, large particles were isolated from infected Chlamydophila abortus by equilibrium and rate zonal sedimentation. A monoclonal antibody that recognizes only assembled viral coat proteins was used in these detection assays. Thus, the detected particles represent virions and/or postcapsid formation assembly intermediates. Two distinct particle types were detected, differing in both protein and DNA content. Filled particles lacked VP3, the putative internal scaffolding protein, whereas empty particles contained this protein. These results indicate that VP3 is a scaffolding protein and that the isolated VP3-containing particles most likely represent Chp2 procapsids.