脂质双层融合
牛痘
融合机制
融合
病毒
生物
融合蛋白
细胞生物学
病毒膜
病毒学
生物物理学
病毒包膜
化学
遗传学
重组DNA
基因
哲学
语言学
作者
Robert D. Gray,David Albrecht,Corina Beerli,Moona Huttunen,Gary H. Cohen,Ian J. White,Jemima J. Burden,Ricardo Henriques,Jason Mercer
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41564-019-0488-4
摘要
To achieve efficient binding and subsequent fusion, most enveloped viruses encode between one and five proteins1. For many viruses, the clustering of fusion proteins—and their distribution on virus particles—is crucial for fusion activity2,3. Poxviruses, the most complex mammalian viruses, dedicate 15 proteins to binding and membrane fusion4. However, the spatial organization of these proteins and how this influences fusion activity is unknown. Here, we show that the membrane of vaccinia virus is organized into distinct functional domains that are critical for the efficiency of membrane fusion. Using super-resolution microscopy and single-particle analysis, we found that the fusion machinery of vaccinia virus resides exclusively in clusters at virion tips. Repression of individual components of the fusion complex disrupts fusion-machinery polarization, consistent with the reported loss of fusion activity5. Furthermore, we show that displacement of functional fusion complexes from virion tips disrupts the formation of fusion pores and infection kinetics. Our results demonstrate how the protein architecture of poxviruses directly contributes to the efficiency of membrane fusion, and suggest that nanoscale organization may be an intrinsic property of these viruses to assure successful infection. Super-resolution microscopy and single-particle analysis reveal that vaccinia virus membrane proteins are organized into functional domains whose polarization on the surface of mature virus particles is required for viral entry and virus–cell fusion.
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