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1.
Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) was associated at low pH with Saccharomyces cerevisiae spheroplasts. In the cold, the association was characterized as reversible binding to the spheroplast surface. At 37 degrees C, the association became irreversible due to fusion of the viral envelope with the yeast plasma membrane according to the following data. Proteinase K digestion degraded the viral envelope glycoprotein G but left the internal N and M proteins of VSV intact and associated with the spheroplasts. The plasma membrane could be stained by indirect immunofluorescent labeling using antiserum against VSV. By immunoelectron microscopy, no VSV particles could be detected at the spheroplast surface. Instead, the G protein could be visualized at the external aspect of the plasma membrane using specific antiserum and protein A-gold. Fusion of VSV with spheroplasts occurred below pH 4.75 at temperatures of 30-42 degrees C. It was strictly dependent on the prior removal of the yeast cell wall. The fusion process was fast, calcium-independent, and nonleaky, leaving the spheroplasts viable for at least 4 h. On the average, less than 100 VSV particles could be fused per one spheroplast. Similar data were obtained with Semliki Forest virus.  相似文献   

2.
Rabies virus is a member of the rhabdovirus family. It enters cells by a process of receptor mediated endocytosis. Following this step, the viral envelope fuses with the endosomal membrane to allow release of the viral nucleocapsid into the cytoplasm. Fusion is induced by the low pH of the endosomal compartment and is mediated by the single viral glycoprotein G, a homotrimeric integral membrane protein. Rabies virus fusion properties are related to different conformational states of G. By different biochemical and biophysical approaches, it has been demonstrated that G can assume at least three different states: the native (N) state detected at the viral surface above pH 7, the activated (A) hydrophobic state which interacts with the target membrane as a first step of the fusion process, and the fusion inactive (I) conformation. Differently from other fusogenic viruses for which low pH-induced conformational changes are irreversible, there is a pH dependent equilibrium between these states, the equilibrium being shifted toward the I-state at low pH. The objective of this review is to detail recent findings on rhabdovirus-induced membrane fusion and to underline the differences that exist between this viral family and influenza virus which is the best known fusogenic virus. These differences have to be taken into consideration if one wants to have a global understanding of virus-induced membrane fusion.  相似文献   

3.
Sendai virus particles fuse with negatively charged liposomes but not with vesicles made of zwitterionic phospholipids. The liposome-virus fusion process was studied by dilution of the concentration-dependent excimer-forming fluorophore 2-pyrenyldodecanoylphosphatidylcholine contained in the liposomes by the viral lipids. The data were analyzed in the framework of a mass action kinetic model. This provided analytical solutions for the final levels of probe dilution and numerical solutions for the kinetics of the overall fusion process, in terms of rate constants for the liposome-virus adhesion, deadhesion and fusion. This analysis led to the following conclusions: At neutral pH and 37 degrees C, only 15% of the virus particles can fuse with the phospholipid vesicles, although all the virions may aggregate with the liposomes. The rate constants for aggregation, fusion and deadhesion are of the orders of magnitude of 10(7) M-1 X s-1, 10(-3) s-1 and 10(-2), s-1, respectively. The fraction of active virus increases with temperature. At acidic pH, both the fraction of 'fusable' virus and the rate of fusion increase markedly. The optimal pH for fusion is 3-4, where most of the virus particles are active. At higher pH values, an increasing fraction of the virus particles become inactive, probably due to ionization of viral glycoproteins, whereas at pH values below 3.0 the fusion is markedly reduced, most likely due to protonation of the negatively charged vesicles. While only 15% of the virions fuse with the liposomes at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C, all the liposomes lose their content (Amselem, S., Loyter, A. Lichtenberg, D. and Barenholz, Y. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 820, 1-10). We therefore propose that release of entrapped solutes is due to liposome-virus aggregation, and not to fusion. Both trypsinization and heat inactivation of the virus particles inhibit not only the fusion process but also the release of carboxyfluorescein. This demonstrates the obligatory role of viral membrane proteins in liposome-virus aggregation. Reconstituted vesicles made of the viral lipid and the hemagglutinin/neuraminidase (HN) glycoprotein fuse with negatively charged liposomes similar to the intact virions. This suggests that the fusion of virions with negatively charged vesicles, unlike the fusion of the virus with biological membranes, requires only the HN and not the fusion glycoprotein.  相似文献   

4.
Paramyxoviruses, including the childhood respiratory pathogen human parainfluenza virus type 3 (HPIV3), possess an envelope protein hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) that has receptor-cleaving (neuraminidase), as well as receptor-binding, activity. HN is a type II transmembrane glycoprotein, present on the surface of the virus as a tetramer composed of two dimers. HN is also essential for activating the fusion protein (F) to mediate merger of the viral envelope with the host cell membrane. This initial step of viral entry occurs at the host cell surface at neutral pH. The HN molecule carries out these three different critical activities at specific points in the process of viral entry, and understanding the regulation of these activities is key for the design of strategies that block infection. One bifunctional site (site I) on the HN of HPIV3 possesses both receptor binding and neuraminidase activities, and we recently obtained experimental evidence for a second receptor binding site (site II) on HPIV3 HN. Mutation of HN at specific residues at this site, which is next to the HN dimer interface, confers enhanced fusion properties, without affecting neuraminidase activity or receptor binding at neutral pH. We now demonstrate that mutations at this site II, as well as at site I, confer pH dependence on HN's receptor avidity. These mutations permit pH to modulate the binding and fusion processes of the virus, potentially providing regulation at specific stages of the viral life cycle.  相似文献   

5.
Roche S  Gaudin Y 《Journal of virology》2004,78(16):8746-8752
Fusion of rabies virus with membranes is triggered at a low pH and is mediated by a viral glycoprotein (G). Fusion of rabies virus with liposomes was monitored by using a lipid mixing assay based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Fusion was detected below pH 6.4, and its extent increased with H(+) concentrations to be maximal around pH 6.15. The origin of the partial fusion activity of rabies virus under suboptimal pH conditions (i.e., between pH 6.15 and 6.4) was investigated. We demonstrate unambiguously that fusion at a suboptimal pH is distinct from the phenomenon of low-pH-induced inactivation and that it is not due to heterogeneity of the virus population. We also show that viruses that do not fuse under suboptimal pH conditions are indeed bound to the target liposomes and that the fusion complexes they have formed are blocked at an early stage of the fusion pathway. Our conclusion is that along the fusion reaction, different kinds of fusion machines with different pH thresholds for fusion can be formed. Possible explanations of this difference of pH sensitivity are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Influenza virus (strain X-47) was labeled with the triplet probe, eosin 5-isothiocyanate. Most of the label was found to be associated with haemagglutinin, the major glycoprotein of the viral envelope. Rotational diffusion of the glycoprotein was investigated by measuring flash-induced transient dichroism of the eosin probe. The anisotropy decay curves showed that mobility of haemagglutinin measured at pH 7.3 increased considerably with temperature with the greatest change occurring over the range 20-30 degrees C. However, at pH 5.2 no mobility was detectable over the time range of the experiment. The activity of the virus was determined by assaying haemolysis of human erythrocytes. The haemolytic activity showed an optimum at pH 5.2 and increased markedly with temperature, being negligible below 20 degrees C. In addition, inactivation of the virus by incubation at pH 5.2 was also strongly temperature dependent. A 15 min incubation at pH 5.2 inactivated the virus above 30 degrees C but had no effect below 20 degrees C. On the basis of these results, it is proposed that mobility of haemagglutinin is significant for its functional properties. When the pH is reduced from 7.3 to 5.2, the mobility observed at higher temperatures is required for the molecular rearrangements which accompany the fusion event. In the absence of an apposing membrane, these rearrangements result in irreversible aggregation of haemagglutinin in the viral membrane, and hence loss of mobility and activity.  相似文献   

7.
There is controversy as to whether the cell entry mechanism of Sindbis virus (SIN) involves direct fusion of the viral envelope with the plasma membrane at neutral pH or uptake by receptor-mediated endocytosis and subsequent low-pH-induced fusion from within acidic endosomes. Here, we studied the membrane fusion activity of SIN in a liposomal model system. Fusion was followed fluorometrically by monitoring the dilution of pyrene-labeled lipids from biosynthetically labeled virus into unlabeled liposomes or from labeled liposomes into unlabeled virus. Fusion was also assessed on the basis of degradation of the viral core protein by trypsin encapsulated in the liposomes. SIN fused efficiently with receptor-free liposomes, consisting of phospholipids and cholesterol, indicating that receptor interaction is not a mechanistic requirement for fusion of the virus. Fusion was optimal at pH 5.0, with a threshold at pH 6.0, and undetectable at neutral pH, supporting a cell entry mechanism of SIN involving fusion from within acidic endosomes. Under optimal conditions, 60 to 85% of the virus fused, depending on the assay used, corresponding to all of the virus bound to the liposomes as assessed in a direct binding assay. Preincubation of the virus alone at pH 5.0 resulted in a rapid loss of fusion capacity. Fusion of SIN required the presence of both cholesterol and sphingolipid in the target liposomes, cholesterol being primarily involved in low-pH-induced virus-liposome binding and the sphingolipid catalyzing the fusion process itself. Under low-pH conditions, the E2/E1 heterodimeric envelope glycoprotein of the virus dissociated, with formation of a trypsin-resistant E1 homotrimer, which kinetically preceded the fusion reaction, thus suggesting that the E1 trimer represents the fusion-active conformation of the viral spike.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the pH-dependent fusion activity of influenza virus toward human erythrocyte ghosts, utilizing a recently developed fluorescence assay, which permits continuous monitoring of the fusion reaction. The rate of fusion is negligible at neutral pH but shows a sharp increase at pH values just below 5.5. This pH dependence profile closely corresponds to that of virus-induced hemolysis. Fusion is rapidly inactivated by a low-pH preincubation of the virus alone either at 37 or at 0 degrees C. The presence of ghosts during this low-pH preincubation, carried out at 0 degree C under which condition there is hardly any fusion, causes a significant protection of the viral fusion activity against inactivation. Fusion initiated at low pH can be arrested instantaneously by readjustment of the pH to neutral. The characteristics of fusion of influenza virus with ghosts deviate from those of fusion with cardiolipin liposomes (Stegmann, T., Hoekstra, D., Scherphof, G., and Wilschut, J. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3107-3113). Fusion with ghosts is consistent with a requirement of the well-documented pH-dependent conformational change in the viral hemagglutinin, whereas fusion with cardiolipin liposomes does not exhibit a strict dependence on the conformational change. Rather, the negative surface charge on the liposomes plays a critical role, as zwitterionic liposomes containing gangliosides show fusion behavior similar to that of erythrocyte ghosts.  相似文献   

9.
Y Gaudin  H Raux  A Flamand    R W Ruigrok 《Journal of virology》1996,70(11):7371-7378
The glycoprotein (G) of rabies virus assumes at least three different conformations: the native state detected at the viral surface above pH 7, the activated state involved in the first step of the fusion process, and the fusion-inactive conformation (I). A new category of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) which recognized specifically the I conformation at the viral surface has recently been described. These MAbs (17A4 and 29EC2) became neutralizing when the virus was preincubated at acidic pH to induce the conformational change toward the I state of G. Mutants escaping neutralization were then selected. In this study, we have investigated the fusion and the low-pH-induced fusion inactivation properties of these mutants. All of these mutants have fusion properties similar to those of the CVS parental strain, but five mutants (E282K, M44I, M44V, V392G, and M396T) were considerably slowed in their conformational change leading to the I state. These mutants allow us to define regions that control this conformational change. These results also reinforce the idea that structural transition toward the I state is irrelevant to the fusion process. Other mutations in amino acids 10, 13, and 15 are probably located in the epitopes of selecting MAbs. Furthermore, in electron microscopy, we observed a hexagonal lattice of glycoproteins at the viral surface of mutants M44I and V392G as well as strong cooperativity in the conformational change toward the I state. This finding demonstrates the existence of lateral interactions between the spikes of a rhabdovirus.  相似文献   

10.
S Yamada  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1986,25(12):3703-3708
Fusion of vesicular stomatitis virus with some cells (HELR 66, KB, and human erythrocytes, both intact and trypsinized) and liposomes made of various natural and synthetic lipids was studied with spin-labeled phospholipid. Binding of virus was assayed separately with radiolabeled and spin-labeled virus. Binding to cells and liposomes was small at neutral pH but enhanced at acidic pHs. Fusion with cells and liposomes was negligibly small at neutral pH but greatly activated at acidic pHs lower than 6.5. Activation of fusion occurred at lower pH values than enhancement of binding. Fusion occurred rapidly and efficiently, reaching a plateau at 50-80% after 3 min at 37 degrees C. Binding and fusion with cells were enhanced by pretreatment of cells with trypsin. Binding to liposomes was dependent on the head group of the phospholipid, stronger to phosphatidylserine than to phosphatidylcholine, but not much dependent on the acyl chain composition. On the other hand, cis-unsaturated acyl chains were required for the efficient fusion, but there was only a small, if any, requirement for the head group. Cholesterol enhanced the fusion further. High fusion efficiency with cis-unsaturated phospholipids cannot be ascribed to the membrane fluidity but may be related to higher tail-to-head volume ratios. Possible mode of interaction of viral G glycoprotein with phospholipid is discussed. The virus cell entry mechanism is suggested as binding to the phospholipid domain in the cell surface membranes, endocytosis, and followed by fusion with the phospholipid domain in endosomes upon acidification.  相似文献   

11.
The entry of enveloped animal viruses into their host cells always depends on membrane fusion triggered by conformational changes in viral envelope glycoproteins. Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection is mediated by virus spike glycoprotein G, which induces membrane fusion between the viral envelope and the endosomal membrane at the acidic environment of this compartment. In this work, we evaluated VSV interactions with membranes of different phospholipid compositions, at neutral and acidic pH, using atomic force microscopy (AFM) operating in the force spectroscopy mode, isothermal calorimetry (ITC) and molecular dynamics simulation. We found that the binding forces differed dramatically depending on the membrane phospholipid composition, revealing a high specificity of G protein binding to membranes containing phosphatidylserine (PS). In a previous work, we showed that the sequence corresponding amino acid 164 of VSV G protein was as efficient as the virus in catalyzing membrane fusion at pH 6.0. Here, we used this sequence to explore VSV–PS interaction using ITC. We found that peptide binding to membranes was exothermic, suggesting the participation of electrostatic interactions. Peptide–membrane interaction at pH 7.5 was shown to be specific to PS and dependent on the presence of His residues in the fusion peptide. The application of the simplified continuum Gouy–Chapman theory to our system predicted a pH of 5.0 at membrane surface, suggesting that the His residues should be protonated when located close to the membrane. Molecular dynamics simulations suggested that the peptide interacts with the lipid bilayer through its N-terminal residues, especially Val145 and His148. Fabiana A.Carneiro and Pedro A. Lapido-Loureiro contributed equally to this work An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

12.
The henipaviruses, represented by Nipah virus and Hendra virus, are emerging zoonotic viral pathogens responsible for repeated outbreaks associated with high morbidity and mortality in Australia, Southeast Asia, India and Bangladesh. These viruses enter host cells via a class I viral fusion mechanism mediated by their attachment and fusion envelope glycoproteins; efficient membrane fusion requires both these glycoproteins in conjunction with specific virus receptors present on susceptible host cells. The henipavirus attachment glycoprotein interacts with a cellular B class ephrin protein receptor triggering conformational alterations leading to the activation of the viral fusion (F) glycoprotein. The analysis of monoclonal antibody (mAb) reactivity with G has revealed measurable alterations in the antigenic structure of the glycoprotein following its binding interaction with receptor. These observations only appear to occur with full-length native G glycoprotein, which is a tetrameric oligomer, and not with soluble forms of G (sG), which are disulfide-linked dimers. Single amino acid mutations in a heptad repeat-like structure within the stalk domain of G can disrupt its association with F and subsequent membrane fusion promotion activity. Notably, these mutants of G also appear to confer a postreceptor bound conformation implicating the stalk domain as an important element in the G glycoprotein's structure and functional relationship with F. Together, these observations suggest fusion is dependent on a specific interaction between the F and G glycoproteins of the henipaviruses. Further, receptor binding induces measurable changes in the G glycoprotein that appear to be greatest in respect to the interactions between the pairs of dimers comprising its native tetrameric structure. These receptor-induced conformational changes may be associated with the G glycoprotein's promotion of the fusion activity of F.  相似文献   

13.
Chandipura virus (CHAV), a member of the vesiculovirus genus, is an emerging human pathogen. As for other rhabdoviruses, CHAV entry into susceptible cells is mediated by its single envelope glycoprotein G which is both involved in receptor recognition and fusion of viral and cellular membranes. Here, we have characterized the fusion properties of CHAV-G. As for vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV, the prototype of the genus) G, fusion is triggered at low pH below 6.5. We have also analyzed the biochemical properties of a soluble form of CHAV-G ectodomain (CHAV-Gth, generated by thermolysin limited-proteolysis of recombinant VSV particles in which the G gene was replaced by that of CHAV). The overall behavior of CHAV-Gth is similar to that previously reported for VSV-Gth. Particularly, CHAV-Gth pre-fusion trimer is not stable in solution and low-pH-induced membrane association of CHAV-Gth is reversible. Furthermore, CHAV-Gth was crystallized in its low pH post-fusion conformation and its structure was determined at 3.6Å resolution. An overall comparison of this structure with the previously reported VSV-Gth post-fusion conformation, shows a high structural similarity as expected from the comparison of primary structure. Among the three domains of G, the pleckstrin homology domain (PHD) appears to be the most divergent and the largest differences are confined to the secondary structure of the major antigenic site of rhabdoviruses. Finally, local differences indicate that CHAV has evolved alternate structural solutions in hinge regions between PH and fusion domains but also distinct pH sensitive switches. Globally the comparison between the post fusion conformation of CHAV and VSV-G highlights several features essential for the protein’s function. It also reveals the remarkable plasticity of G in terms of local structures.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: Temperature-sensitive mutant G3 1 of vesicular stomatitis virus induces mouse neuroblastoma N-18 cells to fuse during infections that are nonpermissive for virus replication, but BHK-21 cells do not undergo the viral glycoprotein-mediated cell fusion. The viral glycoprotein was expressed at the cell surface of both N-18 and BHK-21 cells; therefore, the host cell specificity did not stem from an absence of the viral glycoprotein at the surface of BHK-21 cells. Cell fusion readily occurred between infected and uninfected N-18 cells in mixed cultures, demonstrating that the viral glycoprotein was interacting with an uninfected cell for the initial cell-cell interaction of the cell fusion. Mixing infected BHK-21 cells with uninfected N-18 cells resulted in cell fusion initiated by BHK-21 cell-synthesized viral glycoprotein, but 88% of the nucleiin polykaryocytes were N-18 nuclei. The N-18 cell fusion specificity was readily apparent when infected N-18 cells were mixed with uninfected BHK-21 cells; 98% of the nuclei in polykaryocytes were N-18 nuclei. Similar results also were obtained with mixed cultures of N-18 cells and primary astroglial cells. Thus, the viral glycoprotein synthesized in any of the cell types could initiate cell fusion, but the properties of plasma membranes of neuroblastoma cells appeared to be much more suitable for cell-cell fusion.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)-mediated cell fusion from without can be induced by transient exposure to low pH, subsequent to adsorption of VSV at neutral pH. To study the mechanism of VSV-induced cell fusion, we examined the effect of pH condition at virus adsorption on acid-inducible VSV-mediated cell fusion. Although the binding of VSV to BHK-21 cells was most efficient under acidic condition (pH 5.7-6.3), extensive cell fusion was not observed under this condition. A temporary exposure to low pH after binding at neutral pH also decreased fusion activity. However, return to neutral pH for 2 min just after the acid binding restored the fusion activity. These results indicate the requirement of neutral pH condition for VSV-mediated cell fusion prior to the acid stimulation which induces conformational change of the virus glycoprotein into a fusogenic form.  相似文献   

17.
The spike glycoprotein (S) of the murine coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) binds to viral murine CEACAM receptor glycoproteins and causes membrane fusion. On virions, the 180-kDa S glycoprotein of the MHV-A59 strain can be cleaved by trypsin to form the 90-kDa N-terminal receptor-binding subunit (S1) and the 90-kDa membrane-anchored fusion subunit (S2). Incubation of virions with purified, soluble CEACAM1a receptor proteins at 37 degrees C and pH 6.5 neutralizes virus infectivity (B. D. Zelus, D. R. Wessner, R. K. Williams, M. N. Pensiero, F. T. Phibbs, M. deSouza, G. S. Dveksler, and K. V. Holmes, J. Virol. 72:7237-7244, 1998). We used liposome flotation and protease sensitivity assays to investigate the mechanism of receptor-induced, temperature-dependent virus neutralization. After incubation with soluble receptor at 37 degrees C and pH 6.5, virions became hydrophobic and bound to liposomes. Receptor binding induced a profound, apparently irreversible conformational change in S on the viral envelope that allowed S2, but not S1, to be degraded by trypsin at 4 degrees C. Various murine CEACAM proteins triggered conformational changes in S on recombinant MHV strains expressing S glycoproteins of MHV-A59 or MHV-4 (MHV-JHM) with the same specificities as seen for virus neutralization and virus-receptor activities. Increased hydrophobicity of virions and conformational change in S2 of MHV-A59 could also be induced by incubating virions at pH 8 and 37 degrees C, without soluble receptor. Surprisingly, the S protein of recombinant MHV-A59 virions with a mutation, H716D, that precluded cleavage between S1 and S2 could also be triggered to undergo a conformational change at 37 degrees C by soluble receptor at neutral pH or by pH 8 alone. A novel 120-kDa subunit was formed following incubation of the receptor-triggered S(A59)H716D virions with trypsin at 4 degrees C. The data show that unlike class 1 fusion glycoproteins of other enveloped viruses, the murine coronavirus S protein can be triggered to a membrane-binding conformation at 37 degrees C either by soluble receptor at neutral pH or by alkaline pH alone, without requiring previous activation by cleavage between S1 and S2.  相似文献   

18.
Enveloped viruses must fuse the viral and cellular membranes to enter the cell. Understanding how viral fusion proteins mediate entry will provide valuable information for antiviral intervention to combat associated disease. The avian sarcoma and leukosis virus envelope glycoproteins, trimers composed of surface (SU) and transmembrane heterodimers, break the fusion process into several steps. First, interactions between SU and a cell surface receptor at neutral pH trigger an initial conformational change in the viral glycoprotein trimer followed by exposure to low pH enabling additional conformational changes to complete the fusion of the viral and cellular membranes. Here, we describe the structural characterization of the extracellular region of the subgroup A avian sarcoma and leukosis viruses envelope glycoproteins, SUATM129 produced in chicken DF-1 cells. We developed a simple, automated method for acquiring high resolution mass spectrometry data using electron capture dissociation conditions that preferentially cleave the disulfide bond more readily than the peptide backbone amide bonds that enabled the identification of disulfide-linked peptides. Seven of nine disulfide bonds were definitively assigned; the remaining two bonds were assigned to an adjacent pair of cysteine residues. The first cysteine of surface and the last cysteine of the transmembrane form a disulfide bond linking the heterodimer. The surface glycoprotein contains a free cysteine at residue 38 previously reported to be critical for virus entry. Eleven of 13 possible SUATM129 N-linked glycosylation sites were modified with carbohydrate. This study demonstrates the utility of this simple yet powerful method for assigning disulfide bonds in a complex glycoprotein.  相似文献   

19.
Infection by enveloped viruses initially involves membrane fusion between viral and host cell membranes. The fusion peptide plays a crucial role in triggering this reaction. To clarify how the fusion peptide exerts this specific function, we carried out biophysical studies of three fusion peptide analogs of influenza virus hemagglutinin HA2, namely E5, G13L, and L17A. E5 exhibits an activity similar to the native fusion peptide, whereas G13L and L17A, which are two point mutants of the E5 analog, possess much less fusion activity. Our CD data showed that the conformations of these three analogs in SDS micelles are pH-dependent, with higher alpha-helical contents at acidic pH. Tryptophan fluorescence emission experiments indicated that these three analogs insert deeper into lipid bilayers at acidic pH. The three-dimensional structure of the E5 analog in SDS micelles at pH 4.0 revealed that two segments, Leu(2)-Glu(11) and Trp(14)-Ile(18), form amphipathic helical conformations, with Gly(12)-Gly(13) forming a hinge. The hydrophobic residues in the N- and C-terminal helices form a hydrophobic cluster. At neutral pH, however, the C-terminal helix of Trp(14)-Ile(18) reduces dramatically, and the hydrophobic core observed at acidic pH is severely disrupted. We suggest that the disruption of the C-terminal helix renders the E5 analog fusion-inactive at neutral pH. Furthermore, the decrease of the hinge and the reduction of fusion activity in G13L reveal the importance of the hinge in fusion activity. Also, the decrease in the C-terminal helix and the reduction of fusion activity in L17A demonstrates the importance of the C-terminal helix in fusion activity. Based on these biophysical studies, we propose a model that illustrates the structural change of the HA2 fusion peptide analog and explains how the analog interacts with the lipid bilayer at different pH values.  相似文献   

20.
La Crosse virus, a member of the California serogroup of the family Bunyaviridae, causes encephalitis in humans and laboratory rodents. A variant virus (V22) selected with a monoclonal antibody against the large (G1) glycoprotein showed diminished neuroinvasiveness after peripheral inoculation. This variant has an alteration in its fusion function, requiring a lower pH for the activation of fusion and demonstrating reduced efficiency of cell-to-cell fusion of BHK-21 cultures. V22 was studied in detail following the infection by intraperitoneal or intracerebral routes in suckling, weanling, or adult CD-1 mice. It exhibited a marked reduction in its ability to replicate in striated muscle and to produce viremia; however, after intracerebral injection V22 virus replicated almost as rapidly in brain as its parent, La Crosse virus. V22 virus thus represents an example of reduced neuroinvasiveness associated with an alteration at a specific epitope of the G1 glycoprotein. This same epitope also influences the fusion activity of the glycoprotein.  相似文献   

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