Physico-chemical requirements and kinetics of membrane fusion of flavivirus-like particles.
Danillo L A Espósito, Jennifer B Nguyen, David C DeWitt, Elizabeth Rhoades, Yorgo Modis
Index: J. Gen. Virol. 96 , 1702-11, (2015)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Flaviviruses deliver their RNA genome into the host-cell cytoplasm by fusing their lipid envelope with a cellular membrane. Expression of the flavivirus pre-membrane and envelope glycoprotein genes in the absence of other viral genes results in the spontaneous assembly and secretion of virus-like particles (VLPs) with membrane fusion activity. Here, we examined the physico-chemical requirements for membrane fusion of VLPs from West Nile and Japanese encephalitis viruses. In a bulk fusion assay, optimal hemifusion (or lipid mixing) efficiencies were observed at 37 °C. Fusion efficiency increased with decreasing pH; half-maximal hemifusion was attained at pH 5.6. The anionic lipids bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate and phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate, when present in the target membrane, significantly enhanced fusion efficiency, consistent with the emerging model that flaviviruses fuse with intermediate-to-late endosomal compartments, where these lipids are most abundant. In a single-particle fusion assay, VLPs catalysed membrane hemifusion, tracked as lipid mixing with the cellular membrane, on a timescale of 7-20 s after acidification. Lipid mixing kinetics suggest that hemifusion is a kinetically complex, multistep process.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2015-04-22
[J. Ethnopharmacol. 164 , 229-38, (2015)]
2015-02-11
[J. Neurosci. 35(6) , 2384-97, (2015)]
2015-05-01
[J. Virol. 89(10) , 5714-23, (2015)]
2014-07-01
[Autophagy 10(7) , 1241-55, (2014)]
2014-09-01
[Am. J. Pathol. 184(9) , 2403-19, (2014)]