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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
We have directly compared the effect of two types of dextran sulfate with distinct molecular weights (500 kDa and 5 kDa) on the fusion activity and infectivity of both Sendai and influenza viruses, two lipid-enveloped viruses that differ in their routes of entry into target cells. To correlate membrane merging and infectivity MDCK cells were used as targets for the viruses in both approaches. In either case pronounced inhibition of virus–cell interactions by dextran sulfate was only observed at low pH, even though Sendai virus fuses maximally at pH 7.4. Although membrane merging could not be fully abolished, the inhibitory effect was always greater when the higher molecular weight dextran sulfate was used. The presence of this residual fusion activity, that could not be reduced even with high concentrations of agent, suggests that a limited number of binding sites for dextran sulfate may exist on the viral envelopes. The compounds also inhibited fusion of bound virions, and all results could be reproduced using erythrocyte ghosts as target membranes in the fusion assay, instead of MDCK cells. In agreement with these observations only the infectivity of influenza virus (which requires a low pH-dependent step to enter target cells) was affected by dextran sulfate, again the higher molecular weight compound showing a more pronounced inhibitory effect.  相似文献   

4.
We have studied the differences between erythrocytes and erythrocyte ghosts as target membranes for the study of Sendai virus fusion activity. Fusion was monitored continuously by fluorescence dequenching of R18-labeled virus. Experiments were carried out either with or without virus/target membrane prebinding. When Sendai virus was added directly to a erythrocyte/erythrocyte ghost suspension, fusion was always lower than that obtained when experiments were carried out with virus already bound to the erythrocyte/erythrocyte ghost in the cold, since with virus prebinding fusion can be triggered more rapidly. Although virus binding to both erythrocytes and erythrocyte ghosts was similar, fusion activity was much more pronounced when erythrocyte ghosts were used as target membranes. These observations indicate that intact erythrocytes and erythrocyte ghosts are not equivalent as target membranes for the study of Sendai virus fusion activity. Fusion of Sendai virus with both target membranes was inhibited when erythrocytes or erythrocyte ghosts were pretreated with proteinase K, suggesting a role of target membrane proteins in this process. Treatment of both target membranes with neuraminidase, which removes sialic acid residues (the biological receptors for Sendai virus) greatly reduced viral binding. Interestingly, this treatment had no significant effect on the fusion reaction itself.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
The homotrimeric spike glycoprotein hemagglutinin (HA) of influenza virus undergoes a low pH-mediated conformational change which mediates the fusion of the viral envelope with the target membrane. Previous approaches predict that the interplay of electrostatic interactions between and within HA subunits, HA 1 and HA2, are essential for the metastability of the HA ectodomain. Here, we show that suspension media of low ionic concentration promote fusion of fluorescent labelled influenza virus X31 with erythrocyte ghosts and with ganglioside containing liposomes. By measuring the low pH mediated inactivation of the fusion competence of HA and the Proteinase K sensitivity of low pH incubated HA we show that the conformational change is promoted by low ionic concentration. We surmise that electrostatic attraction within the HA ectodomain is weakened by lowering the ionic concentration facilitating the conformational change at low pH. Dedicated to Prof. K. Arnold on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

8.
S Gibson  C Y Jung  M Takahashi  J Lenard 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6264-6268
The size of the functional units responsible for several activities carried out by the influenza virus envelope glycoproteins was determined by radiation inactivation analysis. Neuraminidase activity, which resides in the glycoprotein NA, was inactivated exponentially with an increasing radiation dose, yielding a target size of 94 +/- 5 kilodaltons (kDa), in reasonable agreement with that of the disulfide-bonded dimer (120 kDa). All the other activities studied are properties of the HA glycoprotein and were normalized to the known molecular weight of the neuraminidase dimer. Virus-induced fusion activity was measured by two phospholipid dilution assays: relief of energy transfer between N-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)dipalmitoyl-L-alpha- phosphatidylethanolamine (N-NBD-PE) and N-(lissamine rhodamine B sulfonyl)-dioleoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylethanolamine (N-Rh-PE) in target liposomes and relief of self-quenching of N-Rh-PE in target liposomes. Radiation inactivation of fusion activity proceeded exponentially with radiation dose, yielding normalized target sizes of 68 +/- 6 kDa by assay i and 70 +/- 4 kDa by assay ii. These values are close to the molecular weight of a single disulfide-bonded (HA1 + HA2) unit (75 kDa), the "monomer" of the HA trimer. A single monomer is thus inactivated by each radiation event, and each monomer (or some part of it) constitutes a minimal functional unit capable of mediating fusion. Virus-induced leakage of calcein from target liposomes and virus-induced leakage of hemoglobin from erythrocytes (hemolysis) both showed more complex inactivation behavior: a pronounced shoulder was present in both inactivation curves, followed by a steep drop in activity at higher radiation levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
An assay is presented that allows continuous and sensitive monitoring of membrane fusion in both artificial and biological membrane systems. The method relies upon the relief of fluorescence self-quenching of octadecyl Rhodamine B chloride. When the probe is incorporated into a lipid bilayer at concentrations up to 9 mol% with respect to total lipid, the efficiency of self-quenching is proportional to its surface density. Upon fusion between membranes labeled with the probe and nonlabeled membranes, the decrease in surface density of the fluorophore results in a concomitant, proportional increase in fluorescence intensity, allowing kinetic and quantitative measurements of the fusion process. The kinetics of fusion between phospholipid vesicles monitored with this assay were found to be the same as those determined with a fusion assay based on resonance energy transfer [Struck, D. K., Hoekstra, D., & Pagano, R. E. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4093-4099]. Octadecyl Rhodamine B chloride can be readily inserted into native biological membranes by addition of an ethanolic solution of the probe. Evidence is presented showing that the dilution of the fluorophore, occurring when octadecyl Rhodamine containing influenza virus is mixed with phospholipid vesicles at pH 5.0, but not pH 7.4, resulted from virus-vesicle fusion and was not related to processes other than fusion. Furthermore, by use of this method, the kinetics of fusion between Sendai virus and erythrocyte ghosts and virus-induced fusion of ghosts were readily revealed. Dilution of the probe was not observed upon prior treatment of fluorescently labeled Sendai virus with trypsin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
FUSION OF INTACT HUMAN ERYTHROCYTES AND ERYTHROCYTE GHOSTS   总被引:15,自引:2,他引:13       下载免费PDF全文
Sendai virus is able to induce the fusion of human erythrocytes. Bivalent cations or ATP are not essential for polyerythrocyte formation. High fusion indices were obtained when Sendai virus was added to cells incubated in the presence of both EDTA and iodoacetic acid. Human erythrocyte ghosts prepared by gradual hemolysis still retain the potential to undergo virus-induced fusion. Fusion of human red blood cells without the addition of viruses was obtained by incubation of erythrocytes at pH 10.5 in the presence of Ca++ (40 mM) or by addition of phospholipase C Clostridium perfringens preparations to cells previously agglutinated or polylysine.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
K Klappe  J Wilschut  S Nir  D Hoekstra 《Biochemistry》1986,25(25):8252-8260
A kinetic and quantitative characterization of the fusion process between Sendai virus and phospholipid vesicles is presented. Membrane fusion was monitored in a direct and continuous manner by employing an assay which relies on the relief of fluorescence self-quenching of the probe octadecylrhodamine B chloride which was located in the viral membrane. Viral fusion activity was strongly dependent on the vesicle lipid composition and was most efficient with vesicles solely consisting of acidic phospholipids, particularly cardiolipin (CL). This result implies that the fusion of viruses with liposomes does not display an absolute requirement for specific membrane receptors. Incorporation of phosphatidylcholine (PC), rather than phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), into CL bilayers strongly inhibited fusion, suggesting that repulsive hydration forces interfere with the close approach of viral and target membrane. Virus-liposome fusion products were capable of fusing with liposomes, but not with virus. In contrast to fusion with erythrocyte membranes, fusion between virus and acidic phospholipid vesicles was triggered immediately, did not strictly depend on viral protein conformation, and did not display a pH optimum around pH 7.5. On the other hand, with vesicles consisting of PC, PE, cholesterol, and the ganglioside GD1a, the virus resembled more closely the fusogenic properties that were seen with erythrocyte target membranes. Upon decreasing the pH below 5.0, the viral fusion activity increased dramatically. With acidic phospholipid vesicles, maximal activity was observed around pH 4.0, while with GD1a-containing zwitterionic vesicles the fusion activity continued to increase with decreasing pH down to values as low as 3.0.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Lysozyme covalently bound to liposomes induces the fusion of liposomes with isolated mouse liver nuclei. The fusion behavior is very similar to the case of erythrocyte ghosts (Arvinte, T., Hildenbrand, K., Wahl, P. and Nicolau, C. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83, 962-966). Kinetic studies showed that membrane lipid mixing was completed within 15 min, as indicated from the resonance energy transfer (RET) measurements. For the resonance energy transfer kinetic measurements the liposomes contained L-alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE), labeled at the free amino group with the energy donor 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl (NBD) or with the energy acceptor tetramethylrhodamine. The lipid mixing at equilibrium was studied by the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching technique (FRAP). Liposomes (with/without lysozyme) containing Rh-labeled DPPE in their membranes were incubated with nuclei at 37 degrees C, pH 5.2, for 30 min. After washing of nuclei by three centrifugations, 60-70% of the initial amount of labeled DPPE was associated with the nuclei in the case of liposomes bearing lysozyme and only 7-10% in the case of liposomes without lysozyme. For the nuclei incubated with liposomes having lysozyme, about 70% of the total Rh-labeled lipids present in the nuclei diffused in the nuclear membrane(s) (lateral diffusion constant of D = (1.4 +/- 0.5) X 10(-9) cm2/s). By encapsulating fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled dextran of 150 kDa molecular mass into the liposomes and using a microfluorimetric method, it was shown that after the fusion a part of the liposome contents is found in the nuclei interior. In this lysozyme-induced fusion process between liposomes and nuclei or erythrocyte ghosts, the binding of lysozyme to the glycoconjugates contained in the biomembranes at acidic pH seems to be the determining step which explains the high fusogenic property of the liposomes bearing lysozyme.  相似文献   

14.
S Nir  K Klappe  D Hoekstra 《Biochemistry》1986,25(8):2155-2161
The kinetics and extent of fusion between Sendai virus and erythrocyte ghosts were investigated with an assay for lipid mixing based on the relief of self-quenching of fluorescence. 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-cell adhesion 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 adhesion step and for the subsequent fusion reaction. Dissociation of virus particles from the cells was found to be of minor importance when fusion was initiated by mixing the particles at 37 degrees C. However, besides the initiation of fusion, extensive dissociation does occur after a preincubation of a concentrated suspension of particles at 4 degrees C followed by a transfer of the sample to 37 degrees C. The conclusion drawn from the levels of fluorescence increase obtained after 20 h of incubation is that in principle most virus particles can fuse with the ghosts at 37 degrees C and pH 7.4. However, the number of Sendai virus particles that actually fuse with a single ghost is limited to 100-200, despite the fact more than 1000 particles can bind to one cell. This finding may imply that 100-200 specific fusion sites for Sendai virus exist on the erythrocyte membrane. A simple equation can yield predictions for the final levels of fluorescence for a wide range of ratios of virus particles to ghosts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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

16.
The effect of temperature on fusion of Sendai virus with target membranes and mobility of the viral glycoproteins was studied with fluorescence methods. When intact virus was used, the fusion threshold temperature (20–22°C) was not altered regardless of the different types of target membranes. Viral glycoprotein mobility in the intact virus increased with temperature, particularly sharply at the fusion threshold temperature. This effect was suppressed by the presence of erythrocyte ghosts and/or dextran sulfate in the virus suspension. In these cases also, no change in the fusion threshold temperature was observed. On the other hand, reconstituted viral envelopes (virosomes) bearing viral glycoproteins but lacking matrix proteins were capable of fusing with erythrocyte ghosts even at temperatures lower than the fusion threshold temperature and no fusion threshold temperature was observed over the range of 10–40°C. The mobility of viral glycoproteins on virosomes was much greater and virtually temperature-independent. The intact virus treated with an actin-affector, jasplakinolide, reduced the extent of fusion with erythrocyte ghosts and the mobility of viral glycoproteins, while the treatment of virosomes with the same drug did not affect the extent of fusion of virosomes with erythrocyte ghosts and the mobility of the glycoproteins. These results suggest that viral matrix proteins including actins affect viral glycoprotein mobility and may be responsible for the temperature threshold phenomenon observed in Sendai virus fusion.This revised version was published online in August 2005 with a corrected cover date.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
It had been suggested that influenza virus-mediated membrane fusion might be dependent on a pH gradient across a target membrane. We have designed experiments in which this issue could be addressed. Two populations of liposomes were prepared, both simulating the plasma membrane of target cells, but with the pH of the internal aqueous medium buffered either at pH 7.4 (physiological cytosol pH) or at pH 5.0 (endosomal pH at which influenza virus displays maximal fusion activity). By monitoring fusion using the R18 assay, we found that the internal pH of the target liposomes did not influence membrane merging as mediated by the influenza virus hemagglutinin, thus demonstrating that a transmembrane pH gradient is not required in this fusion process.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Interactions Between Sendai Virus and Human Erythrocytes   总被引:25,自引:5,他引:20       下载免费PDF全文
Concentrated Sendai virus, when adsorbed to erythrocytes at 4 C, caused invaginations in the plasma membrane. Following elevation of the temperature to 37 C, the plasma membrane became fused with the viral envelope before dissolution of the virions and rupture of the cells. Cell lysis was accompanied by rapid and total loss of hemoglobin to the extracellular space. Following aqueous pyridine extraction, the hemoglobin-free ghosts remaining were found to be devoid of N-acetylneuraminic acid and to have solubility properties different from those of normal erythrocyte ghosts. By the action of viral neuraminidase, bound N-acetylneuraminic acid was also liberated from purified virus receptor substance whose electrophoretic mobility was thereby substantially reduced. Cu++ selectively inhibited hemolysis and neuraminidase without interfering with hemagglutination and attachment. Neuraminidase appeared to be essential for Sendai virus hemolysis; viral particle size may also be a critical factor in this process.  相似文献   

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