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1.
A M Haywood  B P Boyer 《Biochemistry》1986,25(13):3925-3929
Previous work has shown that high-speed centrifugation (300,000 g) of Sendai virus and liposomes in 40% (w/v) sucrose layered under a discontinuous sucrose gradient removes Sendai virus bound to liposomes containing the ganglioside GD1a, a Sendai virus receptor. Centrifugation also removes virus bound to liposomes containing other negatively charged lipids. This work shows that centrifugation of virus through a discontinuous ficoll gradient does not remove virus bound to liposomes containing GD1a but does remove virus from liposomes containing various other negatively charged lipids including the ganglioside GM1, which is not a Sendai virus receptor. The amount of virus that adheres to liposomes increases with increasing content of GD1a in the liposomes. The adhesion of virus to receptor-containing liposomes during centrifugation through a ficoll gradient results from the presence of ficoll and increases with increasing ficoll concentration. Virus also adheres to receptor-containing liposomes during centrifugation in the presence of dextran. These data indicate that caution should be used in interpreting associations demonstrated by centrifugation through dextran and ficoll gradients. They also indicate that binding of virus by ganglioside receptors can be modulated by carbohydrate polymers, which are thought not to have any specific interaction with either viruses or gangliosides.  相似文献   

2.
The role of the target membrane structure in fusion with Sendai virus   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Fusion between membranes of Sendai virus and liposomes or human erythrocytes ghosts was studied using an assay for lipid mixing based on the relief of self-quenching of octadecylrhodamine (R18) fluorescence. We considered only viral fusion that reflects the biological activity of the viral spike glycoproteins. The liposomes were made of phosphatidylcholine, and the effects of including cholesterol, the sialoglycolipid GD1a, and/or the sialoglycoprotein glycophorin as receptors were tested. Binding of Sendai virus to those liposomes at 37 degrees C was very weak. Fusion with the erythrocyte membranes occurred at a 30-fold faster rate than with the liposomes. Experiments with biological and liposomal targets of different size indicated that size did not account for differences in fusion efficiency.  相似文献   

3.
Fusion between membranes of Sendai virus and liposomes or human erythrocytes ghosts was studied using an assay for lipid mixing based on the relief of self-quenching of octadecylrhodamine (R18) fluorescence. We considered only viral fusion that reflects the biological activity of the viral spike glycoproteins. The liposomes were made of phosphatidylcholine, and the effects of including cholesterol, the sialoglycolipid GD1a, and/or the sialoglycoprotein glycophorin as receptors were tested. Binding of Sendai virus to those liposomes at 37 ?C was very weak. Fusion with the erythrocyte membranes occurred at a 30-fold faster rate than with the liposomes. Experiments with biological and liposomal targets of different size indicated that size did not account for differences in fusion efficiency.  相似文献   

4.
The fusion behavior of large unilamellar liposomes composed of N-[2,3-(dioleyloxy)propyl]-N,N,N-trimethylammonium (DOTMA) and either phosphatidylcholine (PC) or phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) has been investigated by a fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay for lipid mixing, dynamic light scattering, and electron microscopy. Polyvalent anions induced the fusion of DOTMA/PE (1:1) liposomes with the following sequence of effectiveness: citrate greater than EDTA greater than phosphate, in the presence 100 mM NaCl, pH 7.4. Sulfate, dipicolinate, and acetate were ineffective. DOTMA/PC (1:1) vesicles were completely refractory to fusion in the presence of multivalent anions in the concentration range studied, consistent with the inhibitory effect of PC in divalent cation induced fusion of negatively charged vesicles. DOTMA/PE vesicles could fuse with DOTMA/PC vesicles in the presence of high concentrations of citrate, but not of phosphate. Mixing of DOTMA/PE liposomes with negatively charged phosphatidylserine (PS)/PE or PS/PC (1:1) vesicles resulted in membrane fusion in the absence of multivalent anions. DOTMA/PC liposomes also fused with PS/PE liposomes and, to a limited extent, with PS/PC liposomes. These observations suggest that the interaction of the negatively charged PS polar group with the positively charged trimethylammonium of DOTMA is sufficient to mediate fusion between the two membranes containing these lipids and that the nature of the zwitterionic phospholipid component of these vesicles is an additional determinant of membrane fusion.  相似文献   

5.
Letter to the editor: Fusion of Sendai viruses with model membranes   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Sendai virus membranes fuse with liposomes containing phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol, sphingomyelin, phosphatidylethanolamine and gangliosides. After fusion the viral glycoprotein spikes are found in patches in the surface of the liposomes.  相似文献   

6.
Phospholipid liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and cholesterol (chol), bearing the sialoglycoprotein glycophorin (GP), are able to effectively bind Sendai virus particles, but not to be lysed by them. Incorporation of gangliosides (gangl) into the above phospholipid vesicles (yielding liposomes composed of PC/chol/gangl/GP), although not increasing their ability to interact with Sendai virions, rendered them susceptible to the viral lytic activity. This was inferred from the ability of the virus to induce release of carboxyfluorescein (CF) upon interaction at 37 degrees C with liposomes composed of PC/chol/gangl/GP. Lysis of liposomes required the presence of the two viral envelope glycoproteins, namely the hemagglutinin/neuraminidase (HN) and the fusion (F) polypeptides, and was inhibited by phenylmethyl sulfonylfluoride (PMSF), dithiothreitol (DTT) and trypsin, showing that virus-induced lysis of PC/chol/gangl/GP liposomes reflects the fusogenic activity of the virus. Incubation of Sendai virus particles with liposomes containing the acidic phospholipid dicetylphosphate (DCP) but lacking sialic acid containing receptors, also resulted in release of the liposome content. Lysis of these liposomes was due to the activity of the viral HN glycoprotein, therefore not reflecting the natural viral fusogenic activity. Fluorescence dequenching studies, using fluorescently labeled reconstituted Sendai virus envelopes (RSVE), have shown that the viral envelopes are able to fuse with neutral, almost to the same extent, as with negatively charged liposomes. However, fusion with negatively charged liposomes, as opposed to fusion with neutral liposomes, was mediated by the viral HN glycoprotein and not by the viral fusion polypeptide.  相似文献   

7.
T Stegmann  S Nir  J Wilschut 《Biochemistry》1989,28(4):1698-1704
Fusion of influenza virus with liposomes composed of negatively charged phospholipids differs from fusion with biological membranes or zwitterionic liposomes with ganglioside receptors [Stegmann, T., Hoekstra, D., Scherphof, G., & Wilschut, J. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 10966-10969]. In this study, we investigated how the kinetics and extent of fusion of influenza virus, monitored with a fluorescence resonance energy-transfer assay, are influenced by the surface charge and the presence of receptors on liposomal membranes. The results were analyzed in terms of mass action kinetic model, providing separate rate constants for the initial virus-liposome adhesion, or aggregation, and for the actual fusion reaction. Incorporation of increasing amounts of cardiolipin (CL) or phosphatidylserine (PS) into otherwise zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC)/phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) vesicles results in a gradual shift of the pH threshold of fusion to neutral, relative to the pH threshold obtained with PC/PE vesicles containing the ganglioside GD1a, while also the rate of fusion increases. This indicates the emergence of a fusion mechanism not involving the well-documented conformational change in the viral hemagglutinin (HA). However, only with pure CL liposomes this nonphysiological fusion reaction dominates the overall fusion process; with pure PS or with zwitterionic vesicles containing CL or PS, the contribution of the nonphysiological fusion reaction is small. Accordingly, preincubation of the virus alone at low pH results in a rapid inactivation of the viral fusion capacity toward all liposome compositions studied, except pure CL liposomes. The results of the kinetic analyses show that with pure CL liposomes the rates of both virus-liposome adhesion and fusion are considerably higher than with all other liposome compositions studied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Sendai virus particles are able to fuse with Pronase-neuraminidase-treated human erythrocyte membranes as well as with vesicles obtained from chromaffin granules of bovine medulla. Fusion is inferred either from electron microscopic studies or from the observation that incubation of fluorescently labeled (bearing octadecyl Rhodamine B chloride) virions, with right-side-out erythrocyte vesicles (ROV) or with chromaffin granule membrane vesicles (CGMV), resulted in fluorescence dequenching. Fusion of Sendai virions with virus receptor depleted ROV was observed only under hypotonic conditions. Fusion with virus receptor depleted ROV required the presence of the two viral envelope glycoproteins, namely, the HN and F polypeptides. A 3-fold increase in the degree of fluorescence dequenching (virus-membrane fusion) was also obtained upon incubation of Sendai virions with CGMV in medium of low osmotic strength. This increase was not observed with inactivated, unfusogenic Sendai virions. The results of the present work demonstrate that, under hypotonic conditions, fusion between Sendai virions and biological membranes does not require the presence of specific receptors. Such fusion is characterized by the same features as fusion with and infection by Sendai virions of living cultured cells.  相似文献   

9.
K Klappe  J Wilschut  S Nir  D Hoekstra 《Biochemistry》1986,25(25):8252-8260
A kinetic and quantitative characterization of the fusion process between Sendai virus and phospholipid vesicles is presented. Membrane fusion was monitored in a direct and continuous manner by employing an assay which relies on the relief of fluorescence self-quenching of the probe octadecylrhodamine B chloride which was located in the viral membrane. Viral fusion activity was strongly dependent on the vesicle lipid composition and was most efficient with vesicles solely consisting of acidic phospholipids, particularly cardiolipin (CL). This result implies that the fusion of viruses with liposomes does not display an absolute requirement for specific membrane receptors. Incorporation of phosphatidylcholine (PC), rather than phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), into CL bilayers strongly inhibited fusion, suggesting that repulsive hydration forces interfere with the close approach of viral and target membrane. Virus-liposome fusion products were capable of fusing with liposomes, but not with virus. In contrast to fusion with erythrocyte membranes, fusion between virus and acidic phospholipid vesicles was triggered immediately, did not strictly depend on viral protein conformation, and did not display a pH optimum around pH 7.5. On the other hand, with vesicles consisting of PC, PE, cholesterol, and the ganglioside GD1a, the virus resembled more closely the fusogenic properties that were seen with erythrocyte target membranes. Upon decreasing the pH below 5.0, the viral fusion activity increased dramatically. With acidic phospholipid vesicles, maximal activity was observed around pH 4.0, while with GD1a-containing zwitterionic vesicles the fusion activity continued to increase with decreasing pH down to values as low as 3.0.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Incubation of intact Sendai virions or reconstituted Sendai virus envelopes with phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes at 37 degrees C results in virus-liposome fusion. Neither the liposome nor the virus content was released from the fusion product, indicating a nonleaky fusion process. Only liposomes possessing virus receptors, namely sialoglycolipids or sialoglycoproteins, became leaky upon interaction with Sendai virions. Fusion between the virus envelopes and phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes was absolutely dependent upon the presence of intact and active hemagglutinin/neuraminidase and fusion viral envelope glycoproteins. Fusion between Sendai virus envelopes and phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes lacking virus receptors was evident from the following results. Anti-Sendai virus antibody precipitated radiolabeled liposomes only after they had been incubated with fusogenic Sendai virions. Incubation of N-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole-labeled fusogenic reconstituted Sendai virus particles with phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes resulted in fluorescence dequenching. Incubation of Tb3+-containing virus envelopes with phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes loaded with sodium dipicolinate resulted in the formation of the chelation complex Tb3+-dipicolinic acid, as was evident from fluorescence studies. Virus envelopes fuse efficiently also with neuraminidase/Pronase-treated erythrocyte membranes, i.e. virus receptor-depleted erythrocyte membranes, although fusion occurred only under hypotonic conditions.  相似文献   

11.
Membrane vesicles containing the Sendai virus hemagglutinin/neuraminidase (HN) glycoprotein were able to induce carboxyfluorescein (CF) release from loaded phosphatidylserine (PS) but not loaded phosphatidylcholine (PC) liposomes. Similarly, fluorescence dequenching was observed only when HN vesicles, bearing self-quenched N-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)phosphatidylethanolamine (N-NBD-PE), were incubated with PS but not PC liposomes. Thus, fusion between Sendai virus HN glycoprotein vesicles and the negatively charged PS liposomes is suggested. Induction of CF release and fluorescence dequenching were not observed when Pronase-treated HN vesicles were incubated with the PS liposomes. On the other hand, the fusogenic activity of the HN vesicles was not inhibited by treatment with dithiothreitol (DTT) or phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), both of which are known to inhibit the Sendai virus fusogenic activity. Fusion was highly dependent on the pH of the medium, being maximal after an incubation of 60-90 s at pH 4.0. Electron microscopy studies showed that incubation at pH 4.0 of the HN vesicles with PS liposomes, both of which are of an average diameter of 150 nm, resulted in the formation of large unilamellar vesicles, the average diameter of which reached 450 nm. The relevance of these observations to the mechanism of liposome-membrane and virus-membrane fusion is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of 1,2-dioleoyglycerol (1,2-DOG) on the promotion of Ca(2+)-induced fusion of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (PS/PC) vesicles was studied. 1,2-DOG is able to induce the mixing of membrane lipids at concentrations of 10 mol% without mixing of vesicular contents. At concentrations of 20 mol% or higher, 1,2-DOG promotes fusion, lipid and content mixing, of LUV composed of an equimolar mixture of PS and PC, which otherwise are unable to fuse in the presence of Ca2+. Fusion was demonstrated by fluorescence assays monitoring mixing of aqueous vesicular contents and mixing of membrane lipids. Studies by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy provided evidence for a fusion mechanism different to that of Ca(2+)-induced fusion of pure PS vesicles. Final equilibrium structures were characterized by 31P-NMR and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Ca(2+)-induced fusion of 1,2-DOG containing vesicles is accompanied by the formation of isotropic structures which are shown to correspond to structures with lipidic particle morphology. The possible fusion mechanisms and implications are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Sendai virus envelopes were reconstituted after solubilization of intact virions with either Triton X-100 or octylglucoside. Envelopes obtained from Triton X-100, but not from octylglucoside solubilized virions, were hemolytic and promoted cell-cell fusion. Fluorescence dequenching studies [using N-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole phosphatidylethanolamine-bearing viral envelopes] revealed that both preparations fused with negatively charged phospholipids. Fusion with phosphatidylcholine (PC)/cholesterol (chol) liposomes was promoted only by the hemolytic viral envelopes. Fluorescence dequenching studies, using intact virions bearing octadecylrhodamine B chloride, revealed that intact virions fused with PC/chol as well as with negatively charged phospholipids. Only fusion with PC/chol liposomes was inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and dithiothreitol, reagents which are known to block the viral ability to fuse with biological membranes.  相似文献   

14.
Introduction of macromolecules into mammalian cells by cell fusion   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Proteins with molecular weights of up to 500K can be enclosed in erythrocyte ghosts by exposing the ghosts to hypotonic solution containing these proteins. The proteins can then be introduced into recipient cells by fusing the ghosts with the cells using HVJ, PEG, or influenza virus. Some applications of this method are described. By an improved method, 15 kbp DNA and IgM (900 kDa) can be entrapped in erythrocyte membranes and these are then treated with liposomes containing gangliosides and HVJ. These treated membranes containing large macromolecules fuse with almost 100% of the recipient cells used. Naked liposomes infrequently fuse with cultured cells, so introduction of their contents into cells is very inefficient. However, liposomes constituted from lipid and glycoproteins (HN and F) of HVJ (Sendai virus), by removing a nonionic detergent, fuse with cells about 200 times more efficiently than naked liposomes. Naked liposomes can fuse with specific cells, such as cells infected with subacute sclerosing panencephalitis virus or with human immunodeficiency virus. Plasmid DNA and mRNA of up to about 40 kbp can be entrapped efficiently in liposomes associated with gangliosides formed by reverse-phase evaporation, and then reacted with HVJ. The contents of the resulting liposomes with HVJ can be introduced efficiently into cultured cells in a suspended or plated state, and nearly all the cells then express the gene transiently. This procedure is also effective for obtaining stable transformants of many kinds of cultured cells.  相似文献   

15.
Y S Tsao  L Huang 《Biochemistry》1986,25(13):3971-3976
Fusion between Sendai virus and liposomes containing phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and different mole fractions of ganglioside GD1a has been investigated. At different times after mixing the virus and liposomes, the mixture was diluted with a sucrose solution and centrifuged in an airfuge to separate the free and virus-associated liposomes. Since the HN protein of the virus was sensitive to the reducing reagent, inclusion of dithiothreitol in the sucrose solution dissociated the bound but not the fused liposomes. Thus, the kinetics of liposome-virus binding and fusion could be independently measured. The validity of the assay was confirmed by electron microscopic observation of the virus-liposome mixtures. With trypsin-treated Sendai virus, in which the F glycoprotein of the virus had been selectively removed, only virus-liposome binding but not fusion was observed. The kinetic experiments were done under the condition of virus in large excess. Following a very fast initial binding phase, which was completed at the "zero time" of the measurement, the virus-liposome binding followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. The subsequent fusion step was zero order. Judging from the discontinuity in the Arrhenius plots, both binding and fusion events were sensitive to the gel-liquid-crystalline phase transition of the target membrane. The binding rate constants had activation energies between 16 and 23 kcal/mol at temperatures above the transition. They were not sensitive to temperature change at temperatures below the transition. On the other hand, the fusion rate constants were not sensitive to temperature change above the transition, except for 6.3% GD1a liposomes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
There is evidence that membranes of rod outer segment (ROS) disks are a high-affinity Ca(2+) binding site. We were interested to see if the high occurrence of sixfold unsaturated docosahexaenoic acid in ROS lipids influences Ca(2+)-membrane interaction. Ca(2+) binding to polyunsaturated model membranes that mimic the lipid composition of ROS was studied by microelectrophoresis and (2)H NMR. Ca(2+) association constants of polyunsaturated membranes were found to be a factor of approximately 2 smaller than constants of monounsaturated membranes. Furthermore, strength of Ca(2+) binding to monounsaturated membranes increased with the addition of cholesterol, while binding to polyunsaturated lipids was unaffected. The data suggest that the lipid phosphate groups of phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and phosphatidylserine (PS) in PC/PE/PS (4:4:1, mol/mol) are primary targets for Ca(2+). Negatively charged serine in PS controls Ca (2+) binding by lowering the electric surface potential and elevating cation concentration at the membrane/water interface. The influence of hydrocarbon chain unsaturation on Ca(2+) binding is secondary compared to membrane PS content. Order parameter analysis of individual lipids in the mixture revealed that Ca(2+) ions did not trigger lateral phase separation of lipid species as long as all lipids remained liquid-crystalline. However, depending on temperature and hydrocarbon chain unsaturation, the lipid with the highest chain melting temperature converted to the gel state, as observed for the monounsaturated phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) in PC/PE/PS (4:4:1, mol/mol) at 25 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of the lipid environment on docking and fusion of synaptobrevin 2 (Syb2) vesicles with target SNARE complex membranes was examined in a planar supported membrane fusion assay with high time-resolution. Previously, we showed that approximately eight SNARE complexes are required to fuse phosphatidylcholine (PC) and cholesterol model membranes in ∼20 ms. Here we present experiments, in which phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) were added to mixtures of PC/cholesterol in different proportions in the Syb2 vesicle membranes only or in both the supported bilayers and the Syb2 vesicles. We found that PS and PE both reduce the probability of fusion and that this reduction is fully accounted for by the lipid composition in the vesicle membrane. However, the docking efficiency increases when the PE content in the vesicle (and target membrane) is increased from 0 to 30%. The fraction of fast-activating SNARE complexes decreases with increasing PE content. As few as three SNARE complexes are sufficient to support membrane fusion when at least 5% PS and 10% PE are present in both membranes or 5% and 30% PE are present in the vesicle membrane only. Despite the smaller number of required SNAREs, the SNARE activation and fusion rates are almost as fast as previously reported in reconstituted PC/cholesterol bilayers, i.e., of 10 and ∼20 ms, respectively.  相似文献   

18.
Reconstituted influenza virus envelopes (virosomes) containing the viral hemagglutinin (HA) represent an efficient fusogenic cellular delivery system. By interaction of HA with its natural receptors, sialylated lipids (gangliosides) or proteins, virosomes bind to cells and, following endocytic uptake, deliver their contents to the cytosol through fusion from within acidic endosomes. Here, we show that binding to sialic acid is not necessary for fusion. In the presence of streptavidin, virosomes containing a biotinylated lipid fused with liposomes lacking sialic acid if these liposomes also had a biotinylated lipid in their membranes. Moreover, fusion characteristics corresponded well with fusion of virosomes with ganglioside-containing liposomes.  相似文献   

19.
To elucidate the role of phospholipid asymmetry in calcium-phosphate-induced fusion of human erythrocytes, we examined the interaction of erythrocyte membranes with asymmetric and symmetric bilayer distributions of phospholipids. Fusion of human erythrocytes was monitored by light microscopy as well as spectrophotometrically by the octadecylrhodamine dequenching assay. Phospholipid translocation and distribution between the inner and the outer leaflet of intact red blood cells were determined with spin-labeled phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and phosphatidylcholine (PC). Significant fusion of lipid-asymmetric red blood cells where PS and PE are predominantly oriented to the inner leaflet was only observed at Ca2+ concentrations greater than or equal to 10 mM (in the presence of 10 mM phosphate buffer) while fusion of lipid-symmetric erythrocyte membranes was established at greater than or equal to 1.5 mM Ca2+. The Ca2+ threshold of fusion of lipid-asymmetric red blood cells was significantly reduced (i) after exposure of PS to the outer layer but not after redistribution of PE alone, and (ii) upon incorporation of spin-labeled PS into the outer leaflet of red blood cells. Spin-labeled PE or PC did not affect fusion, suggesting that the serine headgroup is an important factor in calcium-phosphate-induced fusion.  相似文献   

20.
Haque ME  Lentz BR 《Biochemistry》2002,41(35):10866-10876
The fusion peptide of the HIV fusion protein gp41 is required for viral fusion and entry into a host cell, but it is unclear whether this 23-residue peptide can fuse model membranes. We address this question for model membrane vesicles in the presence and absence of aggregating concentrations of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). PEG had no effect on the physical properties of peptide bound to membranes or free in solution. We tested for fusion of both highly curved and uncurved PC/PE/SM/CH (35:30:15:20 mol %) vesicles and highly curved PC/PE/CH (1:1:1) vesicles treated with peptide in the presence and absence of PEG. Fusion was never observed in the absence of PEG, although high peptide concentrations led to aggregation and rupture, especially in unstable PC/PE/CH (1:1:1) vesicles. When 5 wt % PEG was present to aggregate vesicles, peptide enhanced the rate of lipid mixing between curved PC/PE/SM/CH vesicles in proportion to the peptide concentration, with this effect leveling off at peptide/lipid (P/L) ratios approximately 1:200. Peptide produced an even larger effect on the rate of contents mixing but inhibited contents mixing at P/L ratios >1:200. No fusion enhancement was seen with uncurved vesicles. The rate of fusion was also enhanced by the presence of hexadecane, and peptide-induced rate enhancement was not observed in the presence of hexadecane. We conclude that gp41 fusion peptide does not induce vesicle fusion at subrupturing concentrations but can enhance fusion between highly curved vesicles induced to fuse by PEG. The different effects of peptide on the rates of lipid mixing and fusion pore formation suggest that, while gp41 fusion peptide does affect hemifusion, it mainly affects pore formation.  相似文献   

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