Distinct Requirements for HIV-Cell Fusion and HIV-mediated Cell-Cell Fusion |
| |
Authors: | Naoyuki Kondo Mariana Marin Jeong Hwa Kim Tanay M. Desai Gregory B. Melikyan |
| |
Affiliation: | From the ‡Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Emory University Children''s Center, Atlanta and ;§Children''s Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, Georgia 30322 |
| |
Abstract: | Whether HIV-1 enters cells by fusing with the plasma membrane or with endosomes is a subject of active debate. The ability of HIV-1 to mediate fusion between adjacent cells, a process referred to as “fusion-from-without” (FFWO), shows that this virus can fuse with the plasma membrane. To compare FFWO occurring at the cell surface with HIV-cell fusion through a conventional entry route, we designed an experimental approach that enabled the measurements of both processes in the same sample. The following key differences were observed. First, a very small fraction of viruses fusing with target cells participated in FFWO. Second, whereas HIV-1 fusion with adherent cells was insensitive to actin inhibitors, post-CD4/coreceptor binding steps during FFWO were abrogated. A partial dependence of HIV-cell fusion on actin remodeling was observed in CD4+ T cells, but this effect appeared to be due to the actin dependence of virus uptake. Third, deletion of the cytoplasmic tail of HIV-1 gp41 dramatically enhanced the ability of the virus to promote FFWO, while having a modest effect on virus-cell fusion. Distinct efficiencies and actin dependences of FFWO versus HIV-cell fusion are consistent with the notion that, except for a minor fraction of particles that mediate fusion between the plasma membranes of adjacent cells, HIV-1 enters through an endocytic pathway. We surmise, however, that cell-cell contacts enabling HIV-1 fusion with the plasma membrane could be favored at the sites of high density of target cells, such as lymph nodes. |
| |
Keywords: | Cytoskeleton Endocytosis Fluorescence Membrane Fusion Plasma Membrane |
|
|