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1.
Influenza virus infection results in host cell death and major tissue damage. Specific components of the apoptotic pathway, a signaling cascade that ultimately leads to cell death, are implicated in promoting influenza virus replication. BAD is a cell death regulator that constitutes a critical control point in the intrinsic apoptosis pathway, which occurs through the dysregulation of mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization and the subsequent activation of downstream apoptogenic factors. Here we report a novel proviral role for the proapoptotic protein BAD in influenza virus replication. We show that influenza virus-induced cytopathology and cell death are considerably inhibited in BAD knockdown cells and that both virus replication and viral protein production are dramatically reduced, which suggests that virus-induced apoptosis is BAD dependent. Our data showed that influenza viruses induced phosphorylation of BAD at residues S112 and S136 in a temporal manner. Viral infection also induced BAD cleavage, late in the viral life cycle, to a truncated form that is reportedly a more potent inducer of apoptosis. We further demonstrate that knockdown of BAD resulted in reduced cytochrome c release and suppression of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway during influenza virus replication, as seen by an inhibition of caspases-3, caspase-7, and procyclic acidic repetitive protein (PARP) cleavage. Our data indicate that influenza viruses carefully modulate the activation of the apoptotic pathway that is dependent on the regulatory function of BAD and that failure of apoptosis activation resulted in unproductive viral replication.  相似文献   

2.
Influenza is an acute respiratory viral disease that is transmitted in the first few days of infection. Evasion of host innate immune defenses, including natural killer (NK) cells, is important for the virus''s success as a pathogen of humans and other animals. NK cells encounter influenza viruses within the microenvironment of infected cells and are important for host innate immunity during influenza virus infection. It is therefore important to investigate the direct effects of influenza virus on NK cells. In this study, we demonstrated for the first time that influenza virus directly infects and replicates in primary human NK cells. Viral entry into NK cells was mediated by both clathrin- and caveolin-dependent endocytosis rather than through macropinocytosis and was dependent on the sialic acids on cell surfaces. In addition, influenza virus infection induced a marked apoptosis of NK cells. Our findings suggest that influenza virus can directly target and kill NK cells, a potential novel strategy of influenza virus to evade the NK cell innate immune defense that is likely to facilitate viral transmission and may also contribute to virus pathogenesis.Influenza is an acute respiratory virus infection that continues to pose endemic, zoonotic, and pandemic threats to human health, with significant morbidity and mortality (17). At the early phase of viral infection, innate immunity plays important roles in host defense by limiting viral replication and helping to initiate an adaptive immune response. Natural killer (NK) cells are key effector cells in innate immunity and play a critical role in the first line of host defense against acute viral infections by directly destroying infected cells without the need for prior antigen stimulation (7, 20). As influenza illness and virus transmission usually occur in the first few days of infection, the virus has to devise strategies to evade host innate immune responses, including NK cell immunity (15, 21).NK cells can recognize and kill influenza virus-infected cells (2, 10, 23); to counteract this killing, however, influenza virus has developed an escape strategy that inhibits NK cell cytotoxicity by increasing the binding of two inhibitory receptors to the infected cells after infection (1). The individuals with complete NK cell deficiency developed life-threatening varicella zoster virus and cytomegalovirus infection, but no severe influenza virus infection occurred (30, 40). Indeed, the interaction between human NK cells and influenza virus remains poorly understood. After influenza virus infection, respiratory epithelial cells release inflammatory chemokines that recruit NK cells to the site of infection (12). As a lytic virus, numerous influenza virus particles are released from the infected epithelia and macrophages (5, 9, 33). In the infected microenvironment, NK cells undoubtedly encounter these infective virus particles. It is therefore important to investigate the direct interaction of NK cells with influenza virus. Patients with severe influenza virus infection were shown to have diminished NK cells in peripheral blood and an almost complete absence of pulmonary NK cells, together with marked apoptosis (13, 42). During influenza virus infection in mice, a transient increase of NK cytotoxicity is followed by a marked decrease in NK cell activity, with a virus dose-dependent effect (8, 28). These data suggest that influenza virus may directly target NK cells as part of its immunoevasion strategies. However, no reports of the direct effects of influenza virus on human NK cells have so far been available.In this study, we demonstrated that influenza virus infects and replicates in primary human NK cells. Viral infection was dependent on sialic acids on the cells. The entry was mediated by both clathrin- and caveolin-dependent endocytosis rather than macropinocytosis. Influenza virus infection induced a marked apoptosis of NK cells, which contributed to reduced NK cell cytotoxicity. This, to the best of our knowledge, is the first paper to demonstrate that influenza virus can directly infect NK cells and induce cell apoptosis. These findings suggest that influenza virus may have developed a novel strategy to evade NK cell innate immune defenses, which is likely to facilitate viral transmission and may also contribute to virus pathogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
Formation of Influenza Virus Proteins   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Eight virus-specific proteins have been found in chicken embryo fibroblasts infected with fowl plague virus. Among them are two glycoproteins which are the constituents of the hemagglutinin on the virus particle. They are derived from a large precursor glycoprotein by cleavage of a covalent linkage. The reaction can be blocked by the protease inhibitor diisopropylfluorophosphate and the amino acid analogue fluorophenylalanine. This indicates that a peptide bond is cleaved. If infected cells are kept at 25 C, a temperature at which virus maturation is inhibited, the precursor glycoprotein is cleaved at a significantly slower rate than at 37 C. It appears, however, that a reduced synthesis of the carbohydrate-free envelope protein is responsible for the block of virus maturation at 25 C rather than the lower cleavage rate of the precursor.  相似文献   

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Autophagy is an intracellular pathway that can contribute to innate antiviral immunity by delivering viruses to lysosomes for degradation or can be beneficial for viruses by providing specialized membranes for virus replication. Here, we show that the picornavirus foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) induces the formation of autophagosomes. Induction was dependent on Atg5, involved processing of LC3 to LC3II, and led to a redistribution of LC3 from the cytosol to punctate vesicles indicative of authentic autophagosomes. Furthermore, FMDV yields were reduced in cells lacking Atg5, suggesting that autophagy may facilitate FMDV infection. However, induction of autophagosomes by FMDV appeared to differ from starvation, as the generation of LC3 punctae was not inhibited by wortmannin, implying that FMDV-induced autophagosome formation does not require the class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) activity of vps34. Unlike other picornaviruses, for which there is strong evidence that autophagosome formation is linked to expression of viral nonstructural proteins, FMDV induced autophagosomes very early during infection. Furthermore, autophagosomes could be triggered by either UV-inactivated virus or empty FMDV capsids, suggesting that autophagosome formation was activated during cell entry. Unlike other picornaviruses, FMDV-induced autophagosomes did not colocalize with the viral 3A or 3D protein. In contrast, ∼50% of the autophagosomes induced by FMDV colocalized with VP1. LC3 and VP1 also colocalized with the cellular adaptor protein p62, which normally targets ubiquitinated proteins to autophagosomes. These results suggest that FMDV induces autophagosomes during cell entry to facilitate infection, but not to provide membranes for replication.  相似文献   

9.
Rab5 is a regulatory GTPase of vesicle docking and fusion that is involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis and pinocytosis. Introduction of active Rab5 in cells stimulates the rate of endocytosis and vesicle fusion, resulting in the formation of large endocytic vesicles, whereas dominant negative Rab5 inhibits vesicle fusion. Here we show that introduction of active Rab5 in fibroblasts also induced reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton but not of microtubule filaments, resulting in prominent lamellipodia formation. The Rab5-induced lamellipodia formation did not require activation of PI3-K or the GTPases Ras, Rac, Cdc42, or Rho, which are all strongly implicated in cytoskeletal reorganization. Furthermore, lamellipodia formation by insulin, Ras, or Rac was not affected by expression of dominant negative Rab5. In addition, cells expressing active Rab5 displayed a dramatic stimulation of cell migration, with the lamellipodia serving as the leading edge. Both lamellipodia formation and cell migration were dependent on actin polymerization but not on microtubules. These results demonstrate that Rab5 induces lamellipodia formation and cell migration and that the Rab5-induced lamellipodia formation occurs by a novel mechanism independent of, and distinct from, PI3-K, Ras, or Rho-family GTPases. Thus, Rab5 can control not only endocytosis but also actin cytoskeleton reorganization and cell migration, which provides strong support for an intricate relationship between these processes.  相似文献   

10.
The propagation of various influenza virus strains in primary rhesus monkey kidney (RMK), primary hamster kidney (HK), and the MDCK-USD canine kidney (CK) cell cultures was compared. Virus-infected cultures were examined for cytopathic effect (CPE) and by performing the hemadsorption (HAd) technique. The highest HAd titers were found most often in HK, followed by RMK and CK. However, the CK cell line provided the best substrate for detecting CPE. Although influenza B strains tended to grow to higher titers, these strains produced less CPE than did the A strains.  相似文献   

11.
Accumulating evidence indicates that the tuberous sclerosis complex 1 (TSC1), a tumor suppressor that acts by inhibiting mTOR signaling, plays an important role in the immune system. We report here that TSC1 differentially regulates mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1) and mTORC2/Akt signaling in B cells. TSC1 deficiency results in the accumulation of transitional-1 (T1) B cells and progressive losses of B cells as they mature beyond the T1 stage. Moreover, TSC1KO mice exhibit a mild defect in the serum antibody responses or rate of Ig class-switch recombination after immunization with a T-cell-dependent antigen. In contrast to a previous report, we demonstrate that both constitutive Peyer’s patch germinal centers (GCs) and immunization-induced splenic GCs are unimpaired in TSC1-deficient (TSC1KO) mice and that the ratio of GC B cells to total B cells is comparable in WT and TSC1KO mice. Together, our data demonstrate that TSC1 plays important roles for B cell development, but it is dispensable for GC formation and serum antibody responses.  相似文献   

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Pigs are capable of generating reassortant influenza viruses of pandemic potential, as both the avian and mammalian influenza viruses can infect pig epithelial cells in the respiratory tract. The source of the current influenza pandemic is H1N1 influenza A virus, possibly of swine origin. This study was conducted to understand better the pathogenesis of H1N1 influenza virus and associated host mucosal immune responses during acute infection in humans. Therefore, we chose a H1N1 swine influenza virus, Sw/OH/24366/07 (SwIV), which has a history of transmission to humans. Clinically, inoculated pigs had nasal discharge and fever and shed virus through nasal secretions. Like pandemic H1N1, SwIV also replicated extensively in both the upper and lower respiratory tracts, and lung lesions were typical of H1N1 infection. We detected innate, proinflammatory, Th1, Th2, and Th3 cytokines, as well as SwIV-specific IgA antibody in lungs of the virus-inoculated pigs. Production of IFN-γ by lymphocytes of the tracheobronchial lymph nodes was also detected. Higher frequencies of cytotoxic T lymphocytes, γδ T cells, dendritic cells, activated T cells, and CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were detected in SwIV-infected pig lungs. Concomitantly, higher frequencies of the immunosuppressive T regulatory cells were also detected in the virus-infected pig lungs. The findings of this study have relevance to pathogenesis of the pandemic H1N1 influenza virus in humans; thus, pigs may serve as a useful animal model to design and test effective mucosal vaccines and therapeutics against influenza virus.Swine influenza is a highly contagious, acute respiratory viral disease of swine. The causative agent, swine influenza virus (SwIV), is a strain of influenza virus A in the Orthomyxoviridae family. Clinical disease in pigs is characterized by sudden onset of anorexia, weight loss, dyspnea, pyrexia, cough, fever, and nasal discharge (21). Porcine respiratory tract epithelial cells express sialic acid receptors utilized by both avian (α-2,3 SA-galactose) and mammalian (α-2,6 SA-galactose) influenza viruses. Thus, pigs can serve as “mixing vessels” for the generation of new reassortant strains of influenza A virus that may contain RNA elements of both mammalian and avian viruses. These “newly generated” and reassorted viruses may have the potential to cause pandemics in humans and enzootics in animals (52).Occasional transmission of SwIV to humans has been reported (34, 43, 52), and a few of these cases resulted in human deaths. In April 2009, a previously undescribed H1N1 influenza virus was isolated from humans in Mexico. This virus has spread efficiently among humans and resulted in the current human influenza pandemic. Pandemic H1N1 virus is a triple reassortant (TR) virus of swine origin that contains gene segments from swine, human, and avian influenza viruses. Considering the pandemic potential of swine H1N1 viruses, it is important to understand the pathogenesis and mucosal immune responses of these viruses in their natural host. Swine can serve as an excellent animal model for the influenza virus pathogenesis studies. The clinical manifestations and pathogenesis of influenza in pigs closely resemble those observed in humans. Like humans, pigs are also outbred species, and they are physiologically, anatomically, and immunologically similar to humans (9, 23, 39, 40). In contrast to the mouse lung, the porcine lung has marked similarities to its human counterpart in terms of its tracheobronchial tree structure, lung physiology, airway morphology, abundance of airway submucosal glands, and patterns of glycoprotein synthesis (8, 10, 17). Furthermore, the cytokine responses in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from SwIV-infected pigs are also identical to those observed for nasal lavage fluids of experimentally infected humans (20). These observations support the idea that the pig can serve as an excellent animal model to study the pathogenesis of influenza virus.Swine influenza virus causes an acute respiratory tract infection. Virus replicates extensively in epithelial cells of the bronchi and alveoli for 5 to 6 days followed by clearance of viremia by 1 week postinfection (48). During the acute phase of the disease, cytokines such as alpha interferon (IFN-α), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-6, IL-12, and gamma interferon (IFN-γ) are produced. These immune responses mediate both the clinical signs and pulmonary lesions (2). In acute SwIV-infected pigs, a positive correlation between cytokines in BAL fluid, lung viral titers, inflammatory cell infiltrates, and clinical signs has been detected (2, 48).Infection of pigs with SwIV of one subtype may confer complete protection from subsequent infections by homologous viruses and also partial protection against heterologous subtypes, but the nature of the immune responses generated in the swine are not fully delineated. Importantly, knowledge related to host mucosal immune responses in the SwIV-infected pigs is limited. So far only the protective virus-specific IgA and IgG responses in nasal washes and BAL fluid, as well as IgA, IgG, and IgM responses in the sera of infected pigs, have been reported (28). Pigs infected with H3N2 and H1N1 viruses have an increased frequency of neutrophils, NK cells, and CD4 and CD8 T cells in the BAL fluid (21). Pigs infected with the pandemic H1N1 virus showed activated CD4 and CD8 T cells in the peripheral blood on postinfection day (PID) 6 (27). Proliferating lymphocytes in BAL fluid and blood and virus-specific IFN-γ-secreting cells in the tracheobronchial lymph nodes (TBLN) and spleen were detected in SwIV-infected pigs (7). Limited information is available on the mucosal immune responses in pig lungs infected with SwIV, which has a history of transmission to humans.In this study, we examined the acute infection of SwIV (strain SwIV OH07) in pigs with respect to viral replication, pathology, and innate and adaptive immune responses in the respiratory tract of these pigs. This virus was isolated from pigs which suffered from respiratory disease in Ohio, and the same virus was also transmitted to humans and caused clinical disease (43, 55). Interestingly, like pandemic H1N1 influenza virus, SwIV also infects the lower respiratory tract of pigs. Delineation of detailed mucosal immune responses generated in pig lungs during acute SwIV OH07 infection may provide new insights for the development of therapeutic strategies for better control of virus-induced inflammation and for the design and testing of effective vaccines.  相似文献   

16.
Some symbiotic bacteria cause remarkable reproductive phenotypes like cytoplasmic incompatibility and male-killing in their host insects. Molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying these symbiont-induced reproductive pathologies are of great interest but poorly understood. In this study, Drosophila melanogaster and its native Spiroplasma symbiont strain MSRO were investigated as to how the host''s molecular, cellular and morphogenetic pathways are involved in the symbiont-induced male-killing during embryogenesis. TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling) staining, anti-cleaved-Caspase-3 antibody staining, and apoptosis-deficient mutant analysis unequivocally demonstrated that the host''s apoptotic pathway is involved in Spiroplasma-induced male-specific embryonic cell death. Double-staining with TUNEL and an antibody recognizing epidermal marker showed that embryonic epithelium is the main target of Spiroplasma-induced male-specific apoptosis. Immunostaining with antibodies against markers of differentiated and precursor neural cells visualized severe neural defects specifically in Spiroplasma-infected male embryos as reported in previous studies. However, few TUNEL signals were detected in the degenerate nervous tissues of male embryos, and the Spiroplasma-induced neural defects in male embryos were not suppressed in an apoptosis-deficient host mutant. These results suggest the possibility that the apoptosis-dependent epidermal cell death and the apoptosis-independent neural malformation may represent different mechanisms underlying the Spiroplasma-induced male-killing. Despite the male-specific progressive embryonic abnormality, Spiroplasma titers remained almost constant throughout the observed stages of embryonic development and across male and female embryos. Strikingly, a few Spiroplasma-infected embryos exhibited gynandromorphism, wherein apoptotic cell death was restricted to male cells. These observations suggest that neither quantity nor proliferation of Spiroplasma cells but some Spiroplasma-derived factor(s) may be responsible for the expression of the male-killing phenotype.  相似文献   

17.
Influenza A virus is an important pathogenic virus known to induce host cell cycle arrest in G0/G1 phase and create beneficial conditions for viral replication. However, how the virus achieves arrest remains unclear. We investigated the mechanisms underlying this process and found that the nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) is required. Based on this finding, we generated a viable influenza A virus (H1N1) lacking the entire NS1 gene to study the function of this protein in cell cycle regulation. In addition to some cell cycle regulators that were changed, the concentration and activity of RhoA protein, which is thought to be pivotal for G1/S phase transition, were also decreased with overexpressing NS1. And in the meantime, the phosphorylation level of cell cycle regulator pRb, downstream of RhoA kinase, was decreased in an NS1-dependent manner. These findings indicate that the NS1 protein induces G0/G1 cell cycle arrest mainly through interfering with the RhoA/pRb signaling cascade, thus providing favorable conditions for viral protein accumulation and replication. We further investigated the NS1 protein of avian influenza virus (H5N1) and found that it can also decrease the expression and activity of RhoA, suggesting that the H5N1 virus may affect the cell cycle through the same mechanism. The NS1/RhoA/pRb cascade, which can induce the G0/G1 cell cycle arrest identified here, provides a unified explanation for the seemingly different NS1 functions involved in viral replication events. Our findings shed light on the mechanism of influenza virus replication and open new avenues for understanding the interaction between pathogens and hosts.  相似文献   

18.
The process by which nonenveloped viruses cross cell membranes during host cell entry remains poorly defined; however, common themes are emerging. Here, we use correlated in vivo and in vitro studies to understand the mechanism of Flock House virus (FHV) entry and membrane penetration. We demonstrate that low endocytic pH is required for FHV infection, that exposure to acidic pH promotes FHV-mediated disruption of model membranes (liposomes), and particles exposed to low pH in vitro exhibit increased hydrophobicity. In addition, FHV particles perturbed by heating displayed a marked increase in liposome disruption, indicating that membrane-active regions of the capsid are exposed or released under these conditions. We also provide evidence that autoproteolytic cleavage, to generate the lipophilic γ peptide (4.4 kDa), is required for membrane penetration. Mutant, cleavage-defective particles failed to mediate liposome lysis, regardless of pH or heat treatment, suggesting that these particles are not able to expose or release the requisite membrane-active regions of the capsid, namely, the γ peptides. Based on these results, we propose an updated model for FHV entry in which (i) the virus enters the host cell by endocytosis, (ii) low pH within the endocytic pathway triggers the irreversible exposure or release of γ peptides from the virus particle, and (iii) the exposed/released γ peptides disrupt the endosomal membrane, facilitating translocation of viral RNA into the cytoplasm.Flock House virus (FHV), a nonenveloped, positive-sense RNA virus, has been employed as a model system in several important studies to address a wide range of biological questions (reviewed in reference 55). FHV has been instrumental in understanding virus structure and assembly (17, 19, 45), RNA replication (2, 3, 37), and specific packaging of the genome (33, 44, 53, 54). Studies of FHV infection in Drosophila melanogaster flies have provided valuable information about the antiviral innate immune response in invertebrate hosts (29, 57). FHV is also used in nanotechnology applications as an epitope-presenting platform to develop novel vaccines and medical therapies (31, 48). In this report, we use FHV as a model system to further elucidate the means by which nonenveloped viruses enter host cells and traverse cellular membranes.During cell entry enveloped and nonenveloped viral capsid proteins undergo structural rearrangements that enable the virus to breach the membrane bilayer, ultimately releasing the viral genome or nucleocapsid into the cytoplasm. These entry-related conformational changes have been well characterized for enveloped viruses, which use membrane fusion to cross membrane bilayers (reviewed in reference 59). However, the mechanisms nonenveloped viruses employ to breach cellular membranes are poorly defined. Recently, significant parallels in the mechanisms of cell entry have emerged for a diverse group of nonenveloped viruses. Specifically, programmed capsid disassembly and release of small membrane-interacting peptides appear to be a common theme (reviewed in references 4 and 50).The site of membrane penetration depends upon the route of virus entry into the cell. Viruses can enter host cells via several distinct pathways, including clathrin-mediated endocytosis, caveolae-mediated endocytosis, lipid raft-mediated endocytosis, and macropinocytosis (reviewed in reference 40). The two primary routes of virus entry are clathrin-mediated endocytosis, where viruses encounter an acidic environment, and caveolae-mediated endocytosis, which is pH neutral. Many nonenveloped viruses, including adenovirus (24, 52), parvovirus (6), and reovirus (34, 49), require acidic pH during entry. However, numerous nonenveloped viruses have acid-independent entry mechanisms, including rotavirus (28), polyomavirus (43), simian virus 40 (41, 51), and several members of the picornavirus family (7, 14, 32, 42).Upon reaching the appropriate site of membrane penetration, nonenveloped virus capsid proteins are triggered by cellular factors, such as receptor binding and/or exposure to low pH within endosomes, to undergo conformational changes necessary for membrane interactions. These tightly regulated structural rearrangements may include capsid disassembly, exposure of hydrophobic regions, and/or release of membrane-lytic factors. For example, low pH within endosomes triggers adenovirus capsid disassembly, leading to the release of the membrane lytic protein VI (24, 60). In contrast, poliovirus is activated for membrane penetration by a pH-independent mechanism. Receptor binding triggers the poliovirus capsid to undergo a conformational change, resulting in the exposure of the N terminus of VP1 and the release of VP4 (18, 23), both of which facilitate membrane interactions (20). Notably, even though some viruses, such as reovirus, enter cells via an acidic endocytic pathway, membrane penetration is not acid activated (16), indicating that exposure to low pH and membrane penetration are not always mutual events.The overall simplicity of the FHV capsid, composed of a single gene product, along with the wealth of available high-resolution structural information (reviewed in reference 45) make FHV an ideal candidate for understanding nonenveloped virus entry and infection. FHV, a member of the family Nodaviridae, is a nonenveloped insect virus with a bipartite RNA genome surrounded by an icosahedral protein capsid. The quasi-equivalent T=3 virion (∼300-Å diameter) is initially composed of 180 copies of a single coat precursor protein α (44 kDa). Following capsid assembly the α protein undergoes autocatalytic cleavage to generate two particle-associated cleavage products, a large N-terminal fragment, β (39 kDa), and a small C-terminal fragment, γ (4.4 kDa) (22), creating the infectious virion (46). Mutant FHV particles that do not undergo autocatalytic cleavage, and therefore cannot release the γ peptide, are not infectious (46). It has been hypothesized that these particles are noninfectious because they cannot mediate membrane penetration, but this has never been shown directly.The FHV X-ray structure revealed that the γ peptides were located inside the capsid shell with residues 364 to 385 forming amphipathic helices (19). Subsequent studies showed that the FHV capsid is dynamic, with γ transiently exposed to the exterior of the capsid (11). These findings led to a structure-based model of FHV membrane disruption in which the dynamic γ peptides are reversibly exposed to the surface of the capsid (11), “sampling” the environment until they encounter the appropriate cellular trigger. The virus is then activated to undergo an irreversible conformational change in which the γ helical bundles located at each fivefold axis are externalized and released from the virus particle (17, 19). Upon release, the γ pentameric helical bundles are predicted to insert into and create a local disruption of the membrane bilayer to allow the RNA to enter the cytoplasm (10).While biochemical and structural studies have provided the foundation for a model of FHV cell entry, more rigorous in vivo and in vitro studies are necessary to confirm the ideas put forth in this model. Here, we clarify the route of FHV entry and characterize the tightly regulated events required for FHV membrane penetration. We demonstrate for the first time that low endocytic pH is required for FHV infection, that acidic pH promotes FHV membrane penetration, and that particles exposed to low pH exhibit increased hydrophobicity. In addition, we provide evidence that mutant, cleavage-defective particles are blocked specifically at the membrane penetration step during cell entry. Taken together, these findings offer an experimentally supported model of FHV entry into host cells. In addition, these results add to the accumulating evidence that nonenveloped viruses employ common mechanisms to traverse cellular membranes.  相似文献   

19.
To develop a new therapeutic monoclonal Antibody (mAb) for Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), we immunized a BALB/c mouse with live HL cell lines, alternating between two HL cell lines. After hybridization, we screened the hybridoma clones by assessing direct cytotoxicity against a HL cell line not used for immunization. We developed this strategy for establishing mAb to reduce the risk of obtaining clonotypic mAb specific for single HL cell line. A newly established mouse anti-human mAb (4713) triggered cytoskeleton-dependent, but complement- and caspase-independent, cell death in HL cell lines, Burkitt lymphoma cell lines, and advanced adult T-cell leukemia cell lines. Intravenous injection of mAb 4713 in tumor-bearing SCID mice improved survival significantly. mAb 4713 was revealed to be a mouse anti-human pan-HLA class II mAb. Treatment with this mAb induced the formation of large pores on the surface of target lymphoma cells within 30 min. This finding suggests that the cell death process induced by this anti-pan HLA-class II mAb may involve the same death signals stimulated by a cytolytic anti-pan MHC class I mAb that also induces large pore formation. This multifaceted study supports the therapeutic potential of mAb 4713 for various forms of lymphoma.  相似文献   

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本研究构建了稳定表达甲型流感病毒基质蛋白2(M2)的哺乳动物细胞系。应用PCR方法扩增A/PR/8/34(H1N1)株流感病毒M2基因,将其克隆至真核表达载体pcDNA5/FRT(pDF)上,构建出pDF-M2重组质粒。将鉴定正确的pDF-M2与表达Flp重组酶的pOG44质粒共转染Flp-In-CHO细胞,通过体内同源重组使目的基因整合到宿主细胞染色体上。筛选具有Hygromycin B抗性的重组细胞株命名为CHO-M2。以间接免疫荧光法(IFA)和Western blot法检测M2的表达,共获得15株高表达M2蛋白的重组细胞株。这些重组细胞株在连续培养10代后,PCR方法仍可检测到M2基因的存在,IFA也检测到蛋白的稳定表达。本研究成功获得了稳定表达甲型流感病毒M2的哺乳动物细胞系,为M2蛋白的功能研究和非复制型流感病毒疫苗的研制提供了新的工具。  相似文献   

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