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 46 毫秒
1.
Kinetics of pH-dependent fusion between influenza virus and liposomes   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The pH-dependent fusion between influenza virus and liposomes (large unilamellar vesicles) has been investigated as a model for the fusion step in the infectious entry of the virus into cells. Fusion was monitored continuously, with a fluorescence assay based on resonance energy transfer (RET) [Struck, D. K., Hoekstra, D., & Pagano, R. E. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4093-4099], which allows an accurate quantitation of the fusion process. Evidence is presented indicating that the dilution of the RET probes from the liposomal bilayer into the viral membrane is not due to transfer of individual lipid molecules. The initial rate and final extent of the fusion reaction increase dramatically with decreasing pH, fusion being virtually complete within 1 min at pH 4.5-5.0. From experiments in which the ratio of virus to liposomes was varied, it is concluded that virus-liposome fusion products continue to fuse with liposomes, but not with virus. Fusion is most efficient with liposomes consisting of negatively charged phospholipids, while phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin are inhibitory. The reaction is completely blocked by an antiserum against the virus and inhibited by pretreatment of the virus with trypsin. The effect of proteolytic pretreatment at pH 7.4 is enhanced after preincubation of the virus at pH 5.0, consistent with the occurrence of a low pH induced, irreversible, conformational change in the viral fusion protein, the hemagglutinin (HA), exposing trypsin cleavage sites. When, after initiation of the fusion reaction at pH 5.0, the pH is readjusted to neutral, the process is arrested instantaneously, indicating that the low pH induced conformational change in the HA protein, in itself, is not sufficient to trigger fusion activity.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the interaction between isolated membrane vesicles from chromaffin granules and large unilamellar phospholipid vesicles (liposomes). Mixing of membrane lipids has been monitored continuously, utilizing the fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay described by Struck et al. ((1982) Biochemistry 20, 4093–4099). To demonstrate coalescence of the internal vesicle volumes the transfer of colloidal gold from the liposomes to the interior of the granule membrane vesicles has been examined. Efficient fusion of the liposomes with the granule membranes was observed. Significant fusion occurred in the absence of Ca2+, although the extent of interaction was enhanced in its presence. The sensitivity of the interaction to pretreatment of the granule membranes with trypsin showed the fusion reaction to be a protein-mediated process.  相似文献   

3.
It has been suggested that the hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects host cells through a pH-dependent internalization mechanism, but the steps leading from virus attachment to the fusion of viral and cellular membranes remain uncharacterized. Here we studied the mechanism underlying the HCV fusion process in vitro using liposomes and our recently described HCV pseudoparticles (pp) bearing functional E1E2 envelope glycoproteins. The fusion of HCVpp with liposomes was monitored with fluorescent probes incorporated into either the HCVpp or the liposomes. To validate these assays, pseudoparticles bearing either the hemagglutinin of the influenza virus or the amphotropic glycoprotein of murine leukemia virus were used as models for pH-dependent and pH-independent entry, respectively. The use of assays based either on fusion-induced dequenching of fluorescent probes or on reporter systems, which produce fluorescence when the virus and liposome contents are mixed, allowed us to demonstrate that HCVpp mediated a complete fusion process, leading to the merging of both membrane leaflets and to the mixing of the internal contents of pseudoparticle and liposome. This HCVpp-mediated fusion was dependent on low pH, with a threshold of 6.3 and an optimum at about 5.5. Fusion was temperature-dependent and did not require any protein or receptor at the surface of the target liposomes. Most interestingly, fusion was facilitated by the presence of cholesterol in the target membrane. These findings clearly indicate that HCV infection is mediated by a pH-dependent membrane fusion process. This paves the way for future studies of the mechanisms underlying HCV membrane fusion.  相似文献   

4.
The transfer of phospholipids between two membrane substrates catalyzed by a soluble protein fraction from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides has been demonstrated. The assay employs purified intracytoplasmic membrane (ICM) vesicles derived from cells of R. sphaeroides grown on [3H]acetate as the phospholipid donor substrate and phosphatidylcholine (70%)/phosphatidylethanolamine (30%) unilamellar liposomes containing [14C]triolein, a nontransferable marker, as the acceptor substrate for transferred phospholipids. Incubation of these two membrane substrates with a 40 to 80% (NH4)2SO4 protein fraction from R. sphaeroides results in the transfer of tritium-labeled ICM phospholipids to the acceptor membrane substrate. Upon completion of the incubation period, the donor ICM vesicles are quantitatively separated from the acceptor liposomes by precipitation with antibody prepared against whole, purified ICM vesicles. Phospholipid transfer is linear with respect to time and protein concentration, is inhibited by trypsin and heat, and shows an absolute dependence upon the presence of acceptor liposomes and the 40 to 80% (NH4)2SO4 protein fraction. Control experiments indicate that no fusion of the donor and acceptor membrane occurs during the incubation period and that, following prolonged incubation there is no detectable degradation of the labeled lipid components. Preliminary data on the phospholipid specificity of the transfer reaction is also presented.  相似文献   

5.
The photosynthetic chromatophore membranes of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata were fused with liposomes to investigate the effects of lipid dilution on energy transfer between the bacteriochlorophyll-protein complexes of this membrane. Phosphatidylcholine-containing liposomes were mixed with chromatophores at pH 6.0 to 6.2, and the mixture was fractionated on discontinuous sucrose gradients into four membrane fractions with lipid-to-protein ratios that varied 11-fold. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy revealed that the fractions contained closed vesicles formed by the fusion of liposomes to chromatophores. Particles with 9-nm diameters on the P fracture faces did not appear to change in size with increasing lipid content, but the number of particles per membrane area decreased proportionally with increases in the lipid-to-protein ratio. The bacteriochlorophyll-to-protein ratios, electrophoretic polypeptide profiles on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, and light-induced absorbance changes at 595 nm caused by photosynthetic reaction centers were not altered by fusion. The relative fluorescence emission intensities due to the B875 light-harvesting complex increased significantly with increasing lipid content, but no increases in fluorescence due to the B800-B850 light-harvesting complex were observed. Electron transport rates, measured as succinate-cytochrome c reductase activities, decreased with increased lipid content. The results indicate an uncoupling of energy transfer between the B875 light-harvesting and reaction center complexes with lipid dilution of the chromatophore membrane.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
The ability of apocytochrome c and the heme containing respiratory chain component, cytochrome c, to induce fusion of phosphatidylcholine (PC) small unilamellar vesicles containing 0-50 mol % negatively charged lipids was examined. Both molecules mediated fusion of phosphatidylserine (PS):PC 1:1 vesicles as measured by energy transfer changes between fluorescent lipid probes in a concentration- and pH-dependent manner, although cytochrome c was less potent and interacted over a more limited pH range than the apocytochrome c. Maximal fusion occurred at pH 3, far below the pKa of the 19 lysine groups contained in the protein (pI = 10.5). A similar pH dependence was observed for vesicles containing 50 mol % cardiolipin (CL), phosphatidylglycerol (PG), and phosphatidylinositol (PI) in PC but the apparent pKa values varied somewhat. In the absence of vesicles, the secondary structure of apocytochrome c was unchanged over this pH range, but in the presence of negatively charged vesicles, the polypeptide underwent a marked conformational change from random coil to alpha-helix. By comparing the pH dependencies of fusion induced by poly-L-lysine and apocytochrome c, we concluded that the pH dependence derived from changes in the net charge on both the vesicles and apocytochrome c. Aggregation could occur under conditions where fusion was imperceptible. Fusion increased with increasing mole ratio of PS. Apocytochrome c did induce some fusion of vesicles composed only of PC with a maximum effect at pH 4. Biosynthesis of cytochrome c involves translocation of apocytochrome c from the cytosol across the outer mitochondrial membrane to the outer mitochondrial space where the heme group is attached. The ability of apocytochrome c to induce fusion of both PS-containing and PC-only vesicles may reflect characteristics of protein/membrane interaction that pertain to its biological translocation.  相似文献   

9.
Effects of phorbol ester and teleocidin on Ca2+-induced fusion of liposomes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of different types of lipid membrane defects on Ca2+-induced fusion of liposomes containing phosphatidylserine (PS) were investigated using fluorescent probes. Teleocidin enhanced the fusion of phospholipid vesicles in an assay system using terbium/dipicolinic acid during mixing of internal aqueous phases of vesicles upon fusion. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) suppressed the fusion. This latter phenomenon was also observed by measuring the excitation energy transfer. The promotion of membrane fusion by teleocidin was ascribed to dehydration of the membrane surface, the suppressive effect of TPA to desorption of Ca2+ from the membrane surface. Thus, Ca2+-induced fusion of PS vesicles was shown to be sensitive to defects of the membrane surface, but insensitive to defects of the hydrophobic core of the lipid membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Membrane fusion was studied using human neutrophil plasma membrane preparations and phospholipid vesicles approximately 0.15 microns in diameter and composed of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine in a ratio of 1 to 3. Liposomes were labeled with N-(7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl (NBD) and lissamine rhodamine B derivatives of phospholipids. Apparent fusion was detected as an increase in fluorescence of the resonance energy transfer donor, NBD, after dilution of the probes into unlabeled membranes. 0.5 mM Ca2+ alone was sufficient to cause substantial fusion of liposomes with a plasma membrane preparation but not with other liposomes. Both annexin I and des(1-9)annexin I caused a substantial increase in the rate of fusion under these conditions while annexin V inhibited fusion. Fusion mediated by des(1-9)annexin I was observed at Ca2+ concentrations as low as approximately 5 microM, suggesting that the truncated form of this protein may be active at physiologically low Ca2+ concentrations. Trypsin treated plasma membranes were incapable of fusion with liposomes, suggesting that plasma membrane proteins may mediate fusion. Liposomes did not fuse with whole cells at any Ca2+ concentration, indicating that the cytoplasmic side of the membrane is involved. These results suggest that annexin I and unidentified plasma membrane proteins may play a role in Ca(2+)-dependent degranulation of human neutrophils.  相似文献   

11.
V S Malinin  M E Haque  B R Lentz 《Biochemistry》2001,40(28):8292-8299
A number of fluorescent probes have been used to follow membrane fusion events, particularly intermixing of lipids. None of them is ideal. The most popular pair of probes is NBD-PE and Rh-PE, in which the fluorescent groups are attached to the lipid headgroups, making them sensitive to changes in the surrounding medium. Here we present a new assay for monitoring lipid transfer during membrane fusion using the acyl chain tagged fluorescent probes BODIPY500-PC and BODIPY530-PE. Like the NBD-PE/Rh-PE assay, this assay is based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between the donor, BODIPY500, and the acceptor, BODIPY530. The magnitude of FRET is sensitive to the probe surface concentration, allowing one to detect movement of probes from labeled to unlabeled vesicles during fusion. The high quantum yield of fluorescence, high efficiency of FRET (R(o) is estimated to be approximately 60 A), photostability, and localization in the central hydrophobic region of a bilayer all make this pair of probes quite promising for detecting fusion. We have compared this and two other lipid mixing assays for their abilities to detect the initial events of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-mediated fusion of small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs). We found that the BODIPY500/530 assay showed lipid transfer rates consistent with those obtained using the DPHpPC self-quenching assay, while lipid mixing rates measured with the NBD-PE/Rh-PE RET assay were significantly slower. We speculate that the bulky labeled headgroups of NBD-PE and especially Rh-PE molecules hamper movement of probes through the stalk between fusing vesicles, and thus reduce the apparent rate of lipid mixing.  相似文献   

12.
Fusion and changes in permeability of artificial phospholipid vesicles (liposomes) caused by the influence of α-latrotoxin-like protein (L protein) from the gray matter of the bovine brain were studied using a hydrophobic fluorescent probe, R18. It was shown that L protein stimulates fusion of negatively charged liposomes. This effect becomes stronger in acidified media. The influence of L protein on the permeability of phosphatidylcholine liposome membrane is also a pH-dependent process.  相似文献   

13.
Phospholipid diversity: correlation with membrane-membrane fusion events   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The transport of various metabolically important substances along the endocytic and secretory pathways involves budding as well as fusion of vesicles with various intracellular compartments and plasma membrane. The membrane-membrane fusion events between various sub-compartments of the cell are believed to be mainly mediated by so-called "fusion proteins". This study shows that beside the proteins, lipid components of membrane may play an equally important role in fusion and budding processes. Inside out (ISO) as well as right side out (RSO) erythrocyte vesicles were evaluated for their fusogenic potential using conventional membrane fusion assay methods. Both fluorescence dequenching as well as content mixing assays revealed fusogenic potential of the erythrocyte vesicles. Among two types of vesicles, ISO were found to be more fusogenic as compared to the RSO vesicles. Interestingly, ISO retained nearly half of their fusogenic properties after removal of the proteins, suggesting the remarkable role of lipids in the fusion process. In another set of experiments, fusogenic properties of the liposomes (subtilosome), prepared from phospholipids isolated from Bacillus subtilis (a lower microbe) were compared with those of erythrocyte vesicles. We have also demonstrated that various types of vesicles upon interaction with macrophages deliver encapsulated materials to the cytosol of the cells. Membrane-membrane fusion was also followed by the study, in which a protein synthesis inhibitor ricin A (that does not cross plasma membrane), when encapsulated in the erythrocyte vesicles or subtilosomes was demonstrated to gain access to the cytosol.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Sperm cell activation is a critical step in fertilization. To directly investigate the cell signaling events leading to sperm activation it is necessary to deliver membrane impermeant agents into the cytoplasm. In this study, the use of liposomes as possible agent-loading vectors was examined using (1) the octadecylrhodamine B (R18) and NBD phosphatidylethanolamine (NBD DHPE)/rhodamine phosphatidylethanolamine (rhod DHPE) fusion assays in bulk samples, (2) membrane transfer of fluorescence from liposome membranes labeled with R18 and rhodamine-tagged phosphatidylethanolamine (TRITC DHPE), and (3) lumenal transfer of impermeant calcium ions from liposomes to sperm cells, a process that stimulated sperm cell activation. Intermediate-sized unilamellar liposomes (98.17+/-15.34 nm) were prepared by the detergent-removal technique using sodium cholate as the detergent and a phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine/cholesterol (2:1:1 mole ratio) lipid composition. In the R18 fusion assays, self-quenching increased logarithmically with increasing concentrations of R18 in the liposome membranes; addition of unlabeled sperm to R18-labeled liposomes lead to a rapid release of self-quenching. In the NBD DHPE/rhod DHPE resonance energy transfer (RET) fusion assay, RET was rapidly reduced under similar conditions. In addition, individual sperm became fluorescent when TRITC DHPE-labeled liposomes were incubated with unlabeled sperm cells. Incubation of sperm cells with empty liposomes did not significantly affect sperm cell activation and did not alter cell morphology. However, incubation with Ca (10 mM)-loaded liposomes resulted in a time-dependent increase in sperm cell activation (7.5-fold over controls after 15 min). We conclude that liposomes can be used for direct loading of membrane-impermeant agents into sea squirt sperm cell cytoplasm, and that delivery occurs via fusion and content intermixing.  相似文献   

16.
在本文中,我们用荧光能量共振转移分析和荧光显微技术证明,小鼠艾氏乳腺癌腹水细胞质膜NADH-铁氰化钾氧化还原反应的电子传递所偶联的质子泵活性能诱导细胞与人工脂质体融合。糖酵解代谢的抑制剂碘乙酸能抑制融合,同时融合过程是吸取质子的。近几年来,我们实验室已报道了多种生物膜质子泵均具有诱导膜融合的功能。因此,质子泵诱导膜融合可能具有比较广泛的生理意义。并为细胞中存在有受能量代谢控制的驱动膜融合的生理机制提供了实验证据。  相似文献   

17.
The ability of apocytochrome c and the heme containing respiratory chain component, cytochrome c, to induce fusion of phosphatidylcholine (PC) small unilamellar vesicles containing 0–50 mol% negatively charged lipids was examined. Both molecules mediated fusion of phosphatidylserine (PS):PC 1:1 vesicles as measured by energy transfer changes between fluorescent lipid probes in a concentration- and pH-dependent manner, although cytochrome c was less potent and interacted over a more limited pH range than the apocytochrome c. Maximal fusion occurred at pH 3, far below the pKa of the 19 lysine groups contained in the protein (pl = 10.5). A similar pH dependence was observed for vesicles containing 50 mol% cardiolipin (CL), phosphatidylglycerol (PG), and phosphatidylinositol (PI) in PC but the apparent pKa values varied somewhat. In the absence of vesicles, the secondary structure of apocytochrome c was unchanged over this pH range, but in the presence of negatively charged vesicles, the polypeptide underwent a marked conformational change from random coil to α-helix. By comparing the pH dependencies of fusion induced by poly-L-lysine and apocytochrome c, we concluded that the pH dependence derived from changes in the net charge on both the vesicles and apocytochrome c. Aggregation could occur under conditions where fusion was imperceptible. Fusion increased with increasing mole ratio of PS. Apocytochrome c did induce some fusion of vesicles composed only of PC with a maximum effect at pH 4. Biosynthesis of cytochrome c involves translocation of apocytochrome c from the cytosol across the outer mitochondrial membrane to the outer mitochondrial space where the heme group is attached. The ability of apocytochrome c to induce fusion of both PS-containing and PC-only vesicles may reflect characteristics of protein/membrane interaction that pertain to its biological translocation.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Proton-induced fusion of oleic acid-phosphatidylethanolamine liposomes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Liposomes composed of oleic acid and phosphatidylethanolamine (3:7 mole ratio) aggregate, become destabilized, and fuse below pH 6.5 in 150 mM NaCl. Fusion is monitored by (i) the intermixing of internal aqueous contents of liposomes, utilizing the quenching of aminonaphthalene-3,6,8-trisulfonic acid (ANTS) by N,N'-p-xylylenebis(pyridinium bromide) (DPX) encapsulated in two separate populations of vesicles, (ii) a resonance energy transfer assay for the dilution of fluorescent phospholipids from labeled to unlabeled liposomes, (iii) irreversible changes in turbidity, and (iv) quick-freezing freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Destabilization is followed by the fluorescence increase caused by the leakage of coencapsulated ANTS/DPX or of calcein. Ca2+ and Mg2+ also induce fusion of these vesicles at 3 and 4 mM, respectively. The threshold for fusion is at a higher pH in the presence of low (subfusogenic) concentrations of these divalent cations. Vesicles composed of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine or of oleic acid/phosphatidylcholine (3:7 mole ratio) do not aggregate, destabilize, or fuse in the pH range 7-4, indicating that phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine cannot be substituted for oleic acid and phosphatidylethanolamine, respectively, for proton-induced membrane fusion. Freeze-fracture replicas of oleic acid/phosphatidylethanolamine liposomes frozen within 1 s of stimulation with pH 5.3 display larger vesicles and vesicles undergoing fusion, with membrane ridges and areas of bilayer continuity between them. The construction of pH-sensitive liposomes is useful as a model for studying the molecular requirements for proton-induced membrane fusion in biological systems and for the cytoplasmic delivery of macromolecules.  相似文献   

20.
Membrane fusion is a ubiquitous process in biology and is a prerequisite for many intracellular delivery protocols relying on the use of liposomes as drug carriers. Here, we investigate in detail the process of membrane fusion and the role of opposite charges in a protein-free lipid system based on cationic liposomes (LUVs, large unilamellar vesicles) and anionic giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) composed of different palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC)/palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylglycerol (POPG) molar ratios. By using a set of optical-microscopy- and microfluidics-based methods, we show that liposomes strongly dock to GUVs of pure POPC or low POPG fraction (up to 10 mol%) in a process mainly associated with hemifusion and membrane tension increase, commonly leading to GUV rupture. On the other hand, docked LUVs quickly and very efficiently fuse with negative GUVs of POPG fractions at or above 20 mol%, resulting in dramatic GUV area increase in a charge-dependent manner; the vesicle area increase is deduced from GUV electrodeformation. Importantly, both hemifusion and full fusion are leakage-free. Fusion efficiency is quantified by the lipid transfer from liposomes to GUVs using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), which leads to consistent results when compared to fluorescence-lifetime-based FRET. We develop an approach to deduce the final composition of single GUVs after fusion based on the FRET efficiency. The results suggest that fusion is driven by membrane charge and appears to proceed up to charge neutralization of the acceptor GUV.  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