Ladinsky Mark S, Zhu Li, Ullah Irfan, Uchil Pradeep D, Kumar Priti, Kay Michael S, Bjorkman Pamela J
Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, 91125, USA.
Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06510.
bioRxiv. 2024 Aug 19:2024.08.19.608557. doi: 10.1101/2024.08.19.608557.
HIV-1 delivers its genetic material to infect a cell after fusion of the viral and host cell membranes, which takes place after the viral envelope (Env) binds host receptor and co-receptor proteins. Binding of host receptor CD4 to Env results in conformational changes that allow interaction with a host co-receptor (CCR5 or CXCR4). Further conformational rearrangements result in an elongated pre-hairpin intermediate structure in which Env is anchored to the viral membrane by its transmembrane region and to the host cell membrane by its fusion peptide. Although budding virions can be readily imaged by electron tomography (ET) of HIV-1-infected tissues and cultured cells, virions that are fusing (attached to host cells via pre-hairpin intermediates) are not normally visualized, perhaps because the process of membrane fusion is too fast to capture by EM. To image virions during fusion, we used fusion inhibitors to prevent downstream conformational changes in Env that lead to membrane fusion, thereby trapping HIV-1 virions linked to target cells by prehairpin intermediates. ET of HIV-1 pseudovirions bound to CD4/CCR5 TZM-bl cells revealed presumptive pre-hairpin intermediates as 2-4 narrow spokes linking a virion to the cell surface. To extend these results to a more physiological setting, we used ET to image tissues and organs derived from humanized bone marrow, liver, thymus (BLT) mice infected with HIV-1 and then treated with CPT31, a high-affinity D-peptide fusion inhibitor linked to cholesterol. Trapped HIV-1 virions were found in all tissues studied (small intestine, mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen, and bone marrow), and spokes representing pre-hairpin intermediates linking trapped virions to cell surfaces were similar in structure and number to those seen in the previous pseudovirus and cultured cell ET study.
在病毒包膜(Env)与宿主受体和共受体蛋白结合后,病毒和宿主细胞膜发生融合,随后HIV-1传递其遗传物质以感染细胞。宿主受体CD4与Env结合会导致构象变化,从而允许与宿主共受体(CCR5或CXCR4)相互作用。进一步的构象重排会形成一个拉长的前发夹中间体结构,其中Env通过其跨膜区域锚定在病毒膜上,并通过其融合肽锚定在宿主细胞膜上。尽管通过对感染HIV-1的组织和培养细胞进行电子断层扫描(ET)可以很容易地对出芽的病毒粒子进行成像,但正在融合的病毒粒子(通过前发夹中间体附着于宿主细胞)通常无法可视化,这可能是因为膜融合过程太快,无法通过电子显微镜捕捉。为了在融合过程中对病毒粒子进行成像,我们使用融合抑制剂来阻止Env中导致膜融合的下游构象变化,从而捕获通过前发夹中间体与靶细胞相连的HIV-1病毒粒子。与CD4/CCR5 TZM-bl细胞结合的HIV-1假病毒粒子的ET显示,推测的前发夹中间体为连接病毒粒子与细胞表面的2至4条狭窄辐条。为了将这些结果扩展到更接近生理状态的环境中,我们使用ET对感染HIV-1并随后用CPT31(一种与胆固醇相连的高亲和力D肽融合抑制剂)处理的人源化骨髓、肝脏、胸腺(BLT)小鼠的组织和器官进行成像。在所有研究的组织(小肠、肠系膜淋巴结、脾脏和骨髓)中都发现了被困的HIV-1病毒粒子,代表将被困病毒粒子与细胞表面相连的前发夹中间体的辐条在结构和数量上与之前假病毒和培养细胞ET研究中观察到的相似。