首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
S Nir  K Klappe  D Hoekstra 《Biochemistry》1986,25(25):8261-8266
The kinetics and extent of fusion between Sendai virus particles and liposomes were investigated with an assay for lipid mixing based on the relief of self-quenching of fluorescence. The measurements, which were carried out at pH 7.4 and 5.0, included liposomes of three compositions, cardiolipin (CL), CL/dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (CL/DOPC 1:1), and phosphatidylserine (PS). Liposomal lipid concentrations varied from 2.5 to 50 microM. In addition, the effect of low concentrations of the dehydrating agent poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) on fusion between the virus and the liposomes at pH 7.4 was studied. The results were analyzed in terms of a mass action kinetic model which views the overall fusion reaction as a sequence of a second-order process of virus-liposome adhesion or aggregation, followed by the first-order fusion reaction itself. The fusion products were shown to consist of a single virus particle and several liposomes. Analytical solutions were found for the final extent of fusion and increase in fluorescence intensity following the fusion of fluorescently labeled virus particles with liposomes. The final extents of fluorescence intensity were explained by assuming an essentially irreversible binding of liposomes to inactive virus particles. The percents of active virus particles and the rate constants of fusion and aggregation were larger at pH 5 than at pH 7.4, increased when PEG was included in the medium, and varied with liposomal lipid composition according to the sequence CL greater than CL/DOPC greater than PS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
A M Haywood  B P Boyer 《Biochemistry》1984,23(18):4161-4166
How the lipid composition of liposomes determines their ability to fuse with Sendai virus membranes was tested. Liposomes were made of compositions designed to test postulated mechanisms of membrane fusion that require specific lipids. Fusion does not require the presence of lipids that can form micelles such as gangliosides or lipids that can undergo lamellar to hexagonal phase transitions such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), nor is a phosphatidylinositol (PI) to phosphatidic acid (PA) conversion required, since fusion occurs with liposomes containing phosphatidylcholine (PC) and any one of many different negatively charged lipids such as gangliosides, phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidylglycerol, dicetyl phosphate, PI, or PA. A negatively charged lipid is required since fusion does not occur with neutral liposomes containing PC and a neutral lipid such as globoside, sphingomyelin, or PE. Fusion of Sendai virus membranes with liposomes that contain PC and PS does not require Ca2+, so an anhydrous complex with Ca2+ or a Ca2+-induced lateral phase separation is not required although the possibility remains that viral binding causes a lateral phase separation. Sendai virus membranes can fuse with liposomes containing only PS, so a packing defect between domains of two different lipids is not required. The concentration of PS required for fusion to occur is approximately 10-fold higher than that required for ganglioside GD1a, which has been shown to act as a Sendai virus receptor. When cholesterol is added as a third lipid to liposomes containing PC and GD1a, the amount of fusion decreases if the GD1a concentration is low.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The fusion of viruses with cells and liposomes is reviewed with focus on the analysis of the final extents and kinetics of fusion. Influenza virus and Sendai virus exhibit 100% of fusion capacity with cells at pH 5 and pH 7.5, respectively. On the other hand, there may be in certain cases, a limit on the number of virions that can fuse with a single cell, that is significantly below the limit on binding. It still remains to be resolved whether this limit reflects a limited number of possible fusion sites, or a saturation limit on the amount of viral glycoproteins that can be incorporated in the cellular membrane, like the case of virus fusion with pure phospholipid vesicles, in which the fusion products were shown to consist of a single virus and several liposomes. Both viruses demonstrate incomplete fusion activity towards liposomes of a variety of compositions. In the case of Sendai virus, fusion inactive virions bind essentially irreversibly to liposomes. Yet, preliminary results revealed that such bound, unfused virions can be released by sucrose gradient centrifugation. The separated unfused virions subsequently fuse when incubated with a "fresh" batch of liposomes. We conclude, therefore, that the fraction of initially bound unfused virions does not consist of dective particles, but rather of particles bound to liposomes via "inactive" sites. Details of the low pH inactivation of fusion capacity of influenza virus towards cells and liposomes are presented. This inactivation is caused by protonation and exposure of the hydrophobic segment of HA2, and affects primarily the fusion rate constants. Some degree of inactivation also occurs when virions are bound to cellular membranes.  相似文献   

7.
S Nir  T Stegmann  J Wilschut 《Biochemistry》1986,25(1):257-266
The kinetics and extent of low pH induced fusion between influenza virus and large unilamellar cardiolipin liposomes were investigated with an assay for lipid mixing based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The results were analyzed in terms of a mass action kinetic model, which views the overall fusion reaction as a sequence of a second-order process of virus-liposome adhesion or aggregation followed by the first-order fusion reaction itself. The fluorescence development during the course of the fusion process was calculated by numerical integration, employing separate rate constants for the initial aggregation step and for the subsequent fusion reaction. Analytical solutions were found for several limiting cases. Deaggregation of virus--liposome aggregates was explicitly taken into account but was found to be a minor effect under the conditions studied. The calculations gave good simulations and predictions for the kinetics and extent of fusion at different virus/liposome concentrations and ratios. At pH 5.0 and 37 degrees C, very high rate constants for aggregation and fusion were obtained, and essentially all of the virus particles were involved in the fusion process. Experiments at different virus/liposome ratios showed that fusion products may consist of a single virus particle and several liposomes but not of a single liposome and several virus particles. At pH 6.0, the rate constant for aggregation was the same as at pH 5.0, but the rate constant of fusion was about 5-fold lower, and only 25-40% of the virus particles were capable of fusing with the liposomes. The analytical procedure presented enables elucidation of the crucial role of the composition of target membrane vesicles in the initial adhesion and subsequent fusion of the virus at various pH values.  相似文献   

8.
By employing diphenylhexatriene steady-state fluorescence anisotropy, pyrenedecanoic acid excimer formation, and high sensitivity scanning calorimetry we have demonstrated that the liposomes containing phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and various mole fractions of ganglioside GD1a had a gel-liquid crystalline phase transition between 15 and 25 degrees C. Calorimetric measurements indicated that these phase transitions were broad and centered between 17 and 21 degrees C. The enthalpy change of the transition was linearly dependent on the ganglioside concentration up to 10.0 mol% and plateaued between 11.4-16.2 mol%. The high enthalpy change (37 kcal/mol of GD1a added into the PE bilayer) indicates the existence of PE-GD1a complex structure in the liposomal membrane. It is proposed that semi-fluid domains containing six PE and one ganglioside molecule are present in the PE-GD1a membranes at temperatures above gel-liquid crystalline phase transition. The Sendai virus induced leakage of PE-GD1a liposomes has been investigated by using an entrapped, self-quenching fluorescent dye, calcein. The leakage rate was dependent on the mole fraction of ganglioside GD1a and was maximal at 6.3 mol%. Arrhenius plots of the leakage rates showed breaks in the 20-25 degrees C temperature range, which correspond to the gel-liquid crystalline phase transition of the target liposomes. These data suggest that the rate of Sendai virus-induced leakage can be regulated via fluidity modulation by changing the PE to GD1a ratio at constant temperatures.  相似文献   

9.
The kinetics of fusion of Sendai virus (Z strain) with the human promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL-60, and the human T lymphocytic leukemia cell line CEM was investigated. Fusion was monitored by fluorescence dequenching of octadecylrhodamine (R-18) incorporated in the viral membrane. For one virus isolate (Z/G), the overall rate of fusion (at 37 degrees C) increased as the pH was lowered, reaching a maximum at about pH 5, the lowest pH tested. For another isolate (Z/SF) the rate and extent of fusion were lower at pH 5 than at neutral pH. Lowering the pH from neutral to 5 after several minutes of incubation of either isolate with HL-60 cells resulted in an enhanced rate of fluorescence dequenching. Nevertheless, experiments utilizing NH4Cl indicated that fusion of the virus with cells was not enhanced by the mildly acidic pH of the endosome lumen. Analysis of the kinetics of fusion by means of a mass action model resulted in good simulation and predictions for the time-course of fusion. For the isolate which showed maximal fusogenic activity at pH 5, the rate constant of fusion (approx. 0.1 s-1) at neutral pH was in the range found previously for virus-liposome fusion, whereas the rate constant of adhesion was close to the upper limit for diffusion-controlled processes (1.4.10(10) M-1 s-1). However, for the other isolate (Z/SF) the rate constant of fusion at neutral pH was very small (less than 0.01 s-1), whereas the rate constant of adhesion was larger (greater than or equal to 2.10(10) M-1 s-1). Lowering the temperature decreased the fusion rate. Experiments involving competition with excess unlabeled virions indicated that not all binding sites for Sendai virus on HL-60 cells are fusion sites. The virus fusion activity towards HL-60 cells at neutral pH was not altered significantly by pre-incubation of the virus at pH 5 or 9, in contrast to earlier observations with liposomes and erythrocyte ghosts, or results based on erythrocyte hemolysis or cell-cell fusion.  相似文献   

10.
Sendai virus induced leakage of liposomes containing gangliosides   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Y S Tsao  L Huang 《Biochemistry》1985,24(5):1092-1098
Sendai virus induced liposome leakage has been studied by using liposomes containing a self-quenching fluorescent dye, calcein. The liposomes used in this study were prepared by a freeze and thaw method and were composed of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, and phosphatidylethanolamine (1:2.60:1.48 molar ratio) as well as various amounts of gangliosides and cholesterol. The leakage rate was calculated from the fluorescence increment as the entrapped calcein leaked out of the liposomal compartment and was diluted into the media. It was shown that the target liposome leakage was virus dose dependent. Trypsin-treated Sendai virus in which the F protein had been quantitatively removed did not induce liposome leakage, indicating that the leakage was a direct result of F-protein interaction with the target bilayer membrane. The activation energy of this process was approximately 12 kcal/mol below 17 degrees C and approximately 25 kcal/mol above 17 degrees C. Gangliosides GM1, GD1a, and GT1b could serve as viral receptor under appropriate conditions. Liposome leakage showed a bell-shaped curve dependence on the concentration of ganglioside in the liposomes. No leakage was observed if the ganglioside content was too low or too high. Inclusion of cholesterol in the liposome bilayer suppressed the leakage rate of liposomes containing GD1a. It is speculated that the liposome leakage is a consequence of fusion between Sendai virus and liposomes.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
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   

13.
A novel fluorescence assay [Hoekstra, D., De Boer, T., Klappe, K., & Wilschut, J. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5675-5681] has been used to characterize the fusogenic properties of Sendai virus, using erythrocyte ghosts and liposomes as target membranes. This assay involves the incorporation of the "fusion-reporting" probe in the viral membrane, allowing continuous monitoring of the fusion process in a very sensitive manner. Fusion was inhibited upon pretreatment of Sendai virus with trypsin. Low concentrations of the reducing agent dithiothreitol (1 mM) almost completely abolished viral fusion activity, whereas virus binding was reduced by ca. 50%, indicating that the fusogenic properties of Sendai virus are strongly dependent on the integrity of intramolecular disulfide bonds in the fusion (F) protein. Pretreatment of erythrocyte ghosts with nonlabeled Sendai virus inhibited subsequent fusion of fluorophore-labeled virus irrespective of the removal of nonbound virus, thus suggesting that the initial binding of the virus to the target membrane is largely irreversible. As a function of pH, Sendai virus displayed optimal fusion activity around pH 7.5-8.0. Preincubation of the virus at suboptimal pH values resulted in an irreversible diminishment of its fusion capacity. Since virus binding was not affected by the pH, the results are consistent with a pH-induced irreversible conformational change in the molecular structure of the F protein, occurring under mild acidic and alkaline conditions. In contrast to virus binding, fusion appeared to be strongly dependent on temperature, increasing ca. 25-fold when the temperature was raised from 23 to 37 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Stability of dry liposomes in sugar glasses.   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13       下载免费PDF全文
Sugars, particularly trehalose and sucrose, are used to stabilize liposomes during hydration (freeze-drying and air-drying). As a result, dry liposomes are trapped in a sugar glass, a supersaturated and thermodynamically unstable solid solution. We investigated the effects of the glassy state on liposome fusion and solute retention in the dry state. Solute leakage from dry liposomes was extremely slow at temperatures below the glass transition temperature (Tg); however, it increased exponentially as temperature increased to near or above the Tg, indicating that the glassy state had to be maintained for dry liposomes to retain trapped solutes. The leakage of solutes from dry liposomes followed the law of first-order kinetics and was correlated linearly with liposome fusion. The kinetics of solute leakage showed an excellent fit with the Arrhenius equation at temperatures both above and below the Tg, with a transitional break near the Tg. The activation energy of solute leakage was 1320 kJ/mol at temperatures above the Tg, but increased to 1991 kJ/mol at temperatures below the Tg. The stabilization effect of sugar glass on dry liposomes may be associated with the elevated energy barrier for liposome fusion and the physical separation of dry liposomes in the glassy state. The half-life of solute retention in dry liposomes may be prolonged by storing dry liposomes at temperatures below the Tg and by increasing the Tg of the dry liposome preparation.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied the fusion activity of Sendai virus, a lipid-enveloped paramyxovirus, towards a line of adherent cells designated PC-12. Fusion was monitored by the dequenching of octadecyl-rhodamine, a fluorescent non-exchangeable probe. The results were analysed with a mass action kinetic model which could explain and predict the kinetics of virus-cell fusion. When the temperature was lowered from 37 degrees C to 25 degrees C, a sharp inhibition of the fusion process was observed, probably reflecting a constraint in the movement of viral glycoproteins at low temperatures. The rate constants of adhesion and fusion were reduced 3.5-fold and 7-fold, respectively, as the temperature was lowered from 37 degrees C to 25 degrees C. The fusion process seemed essentially pH-independent, unlike the case of liposomes and erythrocyte ghosts. Preincubation of the virus in the absence of target cell membranes at neutral and alkaline pH (37 degrees C, 30 min) did not affect the fusion process. However, a similar preincubation of the virus at pH = 5.0 resulted in marked, though slow, inhibition in fusion with the fusion rate constant being reduced 8-fold. Viral preincubation for 5 min in the same acidic conditions yielded a mild inhibition of fusogenic activity, while preincubation in the cold (4 degrees C, 30 min) did not alter viral fusion activity. These acid-induced inhibitory effects could not be fully reversed by further viral preincubation at pH = 7.4 (37 degrees C, 30 min). Changes in internal pH as well as endocytic activity of PC-12 cells had small effect on the fusion process, thus indicating that Sendai virus fuses primarily with the plasma membranes.  相似文献   

16.
This paper presents a kinetic analysis of low-pH-induced fusion of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) with cholesterol-containing unilamellar lipid vesicles (liposomes), consisting otherwise of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and sphingomyelin. Fusion is monitored continuously with a lipid mixing assay, involving virus bio-synthetically labeled with the fluorophore pyrene. At pH 5.55, 37 degrees C, SFV-liposome fusion occurs on the time scale of seconds. Extensive fusion (up to 60% of the virus) requires an excess of liposomes, while a low-pH preincubation of the virus alone results in inactivation of its fusion capacity. The onset of fusion after acidification of virus-liposome mixtures is preceded by a pH- and temperature-dependent lag phase. Early in this lag phase, a conformational change in the E2E1 spike glycoprotein occurs, involving formation of a trypsin-resistant E1 homotrimer, exposing a conformation-specific epitope (E1"). These changes are followed by a rapid, cholesterol-dependent binding of the virus to the liposomes (as assessed by sucrose density gradient analysis), subsequent fusion starting only after an additional delay. This sequence of events strongly suggests that the E1 homotrimeric structure represents the fusion-active conformation of the SFV spike, the actual fusion complex possibly involving a higher order oligomer of E1 trimers.  相似文献   

17.
A M Haywood  B P Boyer 《Biochemistry》1982,21(24):6041-6046
The conditions that optimize Sendai virus membrane fusion with liposomes have been studied. No fusion occurs in the absence of ganglioside receptors. Maximum fusion occurs when the molar ratio of ganglioside GD1a to phospholipid is 0.02 or greater. The amount of fusion at 37 degrees C increases with time up to at least 6.5 h. The rate of fusion increases from the lowest temperature tested, 10 degrees C, to 40 degrees C. Above 43 degrees C the amount of fusion decreases because of thermal inactivation of the viral proteins. There is a broad pH maximum between pH 7.5 and pH 9.0. At both ends of the pH range the amount of fusion increases and exceeds that found in the physiologic pH range. Neither ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid nor Ca2+ changes the amount of membrane fusion. The optimal conditions for membrane fusion of Sendai virus membranes with liposomes are the same as the optimal conditions for fusion with host cells and with red blood cells. Since the liposomes contain no proteins, the optimal conditions for Sendai virus membrane fusion must be determined by the viral proteins and be mostly independent of the nature or presence of the host proteins.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Influenza viruses were able to mediate fusion of DNA-loaded liposomes with living cultured cells such as monkey COS-7 cells. This was inferred from the appearance of CAT activity in recipient cells incubated with the combination of influenza viruses and liposomes loaded with the plasmid pSV2CAT. Influenza virions were found to be as efficient as intact Sendai virions in mediating microinjection of foreign DNA into living cells. Also, reconstituted envelopes bearing either influenza glycoproteins or the combination of Sendai and influenza glycoproteins were highly efficient in promoting fusion of loaded liposomes with recipient cells. Introduction of DNA into cultured cells required the presence of an active influenza fusion protein; namely, an active HA glycoprotein. Very little or no CAT activity was observed in cells incubated with loaded liposomes and unfusogenic influenza viruses. The virus-induced fusion event probably occurs within intracellular organelles such as endosomes following receptor-mediated endocytosis of virus-liposome complexes. This is due to the fact that the viral fusion glycoprotein is activated only at acidic pH values such as those which characterize the intraendosomal environment. Results of the present work demonstrate for the first time microinjection of foreign DNA via fusion with membranes of intracellular organelles. The potential of the present system to serve as a biological carrier for in vivo use is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
J Bentz  N Düzgüne?  S Nir 《Biochemistry》1985,24(4):1064-1072
The effect of temperature and divalent cation binding (Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+) on the kinetic rate constants of aggregation and fusion of large phosphatidylserine liposomes is measured for the first time. Fusion is monitored by the Tb3+/dipicolinate assay. Fusion rate constants increase with temperature (15-35 degrees C) in a roughly linear fashion. These rate constants are not otherwise sensitive to whether the temperature is above or below the phase transition temperature of the Ba2+ or Sr2+ complex of phosphatidylserine, as measured by differential scanning calorimetry. Hence, the isothermal transition of the acyl chains from liquid-crystalline to gel phase induced by the cations is not the driving force of the initial fusion event. The aggregation rate constants increase with temperature, and it is the temperature dependence of the energetics of close approach of the liposomes which underlies this increase. On the other hand, the aggregation becomes more reversible at higher temperatures, which has also been observed with monovalent cation induced liposome aggregation where there is no fusion. Calculations on several cases show that the potential energy minimum holding the liposome dimer aggregates together is approximately 5-6 kT deep. This result implies that the aggregation step is highly reversible; i.e., if fusion were not occurring, no stable aggregates would form.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号