Section on Membrane Biology, Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biophysics, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2010 Oct 7;6(10):e1001131. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1001131.
Many enveloped viruses invade cells via endocytosis and use different environmental factors as triggers for virus-endosome fusion that delivers viral genome into cytosol. Intriguingly, dengue virus (DEN), the most prevalent mosquito-borne virus that infects up to 100 million people each year, fuses only in late endosomes, while activation of DEN protein fusogen glycoprotein E is triggered already at pH characteristic for early endosomes. Are there any cofactors that time DEN fusion to virion entry into late endosomes? Here we show that DEN utilizes bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate, a lipid specific to late endosomes, as a co-factor for its endosomal acidification-dependent fusion machinery. Effective virus fusion to plasma- and intracellular- membranes, as well as to protein-free liposomes, requires the target membrane to contain anionic lipids such as bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate and phosphatidylserine. Anionic lipids act downstream of low-pH-dependent fusion stages and promote the advance from the earliest hemifusion intermediates to the fusion pore opening. To reach anionic lipid-enriched late endosomes, DEN travels through acidified early endosomes, but we found that low pH-dependent loss of fusogenic properties of DEN is relatively slow in the presence of anionic lipid-free target membranes. We propose that anionic lipid-dependence of DEN fusion machinery protects it against premature irreversible restructuring and inactivation and ensures viral fusion in late endosomes, where the virus encounters anionic lipids for the first time during entry. Currently there are neither vaccines nor effective therapies for DEN, and the essential role of the newly identified DEN-bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate interactions in viral genome escape from the endosome suggests a novel target for drug design.
许多包膜病毒通过内吞作用入侵细胞,并利用不同的环境因素作为病毒-内体融合的触发因素,将病毒基因组递送到细胞质中。有趣的是,登革热病毒(DEN)是最常见的蚊媒病毒,每年感染多达 1 亿人,仅在晚期内体中融合,而 DEN 蛋白融合糖蛋白 E 的激活已在早期内体的 pH 特征下触发。是否有任何辅助因子可以使 DEN 融合时间与病毒进入晚期内体的时间同步?在这里,我们表明 DEN 利用双(单酰基甘油)磷酸,一种特定于晚期内体的脂质,作为其依赖内体酸化的融合机制的辅助因子。有效的病毒融合到质膜和细胞内膜以及无蛋白脂质体,需要靶膜含有阴离子脂质,如双(单酰基甘油)磷酸和磷脂酰丝氨酸。阴离子脂质作用于低 pH 依赖的融合阶段的下游,并促进从最早的半融合中间产物向融合孔开放的进展。为了到达富含阴离子脂质的晚期内体,DEN 通过酸化的早期内体运输,但我们发现,在缺乏阴离子脂质的靶膜存在的情况下,DEN 的低 pH 依赖性融合特性丧失相对较慢。我们提出,DEN 融合机制对阴离子脂质的依赖性可以保护它免受过早的不可逆重构和失活,并确保在病毒首次遇到阴离子脂质的晚期内体中发生病毒融合。目前,DEN 既没有疫苗,也没有有效的治疗方法,新发现的 DEN-双(单酰基甘油)磷酸相互作用在病毒基因组从内体逃逸中的重要作用表明了药物设计的一个新靶点。