The molecular machinery expressed by cells to coalesce membranes is relatively simple in the case of influenza virus, where hemagglutinin (HA) alone is sufficient for membrane fusion. The debate on how low pH-induced refolding of HA produces membrane fusion centers on the order in which HA merges the lipids of fusing membranes and opens a fusion pore to connect their aqueous contents. Either HA can first cause a proteinaceous ionic channel which then guides lipids to merge, or HA can first produce a local lipidic connection which then breaks to form a pore. It is unknown whether such a lipid connection without a fusion pore (hemifusion), which is achievable for a mutant HA, is a non-physiological intermediate or a sequential step in the fusion mediated by wild-type HA (wt-HA). To detect normally short-living intermediates, we reduced the density and mobility of activated HA, while simultaneously measuring lipid mixing and fusion pore conductance using a system of simultaneous electrophysiological recording and fluorescence video microscopy that we developed. Substantial improvements were made this year to the software controlling and analysing these experiments. Wt-HA did cause hemifusion under these suboptimal conditions. However, rather than an intermediate to fusion, this hemifusion was stable. If no pores were open prior to onset of lipid mixing, pores would not open at all, suggesting that while activated HA mediates local hemifusion, it simultaneously limits expansion of this hemifusion intermediate and impedes lipid diffusion till fusion pore formation.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01HD001409-13
Application #
6108070
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (LCMB)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
13
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Meyer, John D; Warren, Nicholas; Reisine, Susan (2010) Racial and ethnic disparities in low birth weight delivery associated with maternal occupational characteristics. Am J Ind Med 53:153-62
Mazar, Julia; Thomas, Molly; Bezrukov, Ludmila et al. (2009) Cytotoxicity mediated by the Fas ligand (FasL)-activated apoptotic pathway in stem cells. J Biol Chem 284:22022-8
Bashkirov, Pavel V; Akimov, Sergey A; Evseev, Alexey I et al. (2008) GTPase cycle of dynamin is coupled to membrane squeeze and release, leading to spontaneous fission. Cell 135:1276-86
Glushakova, Svetlana; Yin, Dan; Gartner, Nicole et al. (2007) Quantification of malaria parasite release from infected erythrocytes: inhibition by protein-free media. Malar J 6:61
Shnyrova, Anna V; Ayllon, Juan; Mikhalyov, Ilya I et al. (2007) Vesicle formation by self-assembly of membrane-bound matrix proteins into a fluidlike budding domain. J Cell Biol 179:627-33
Chen, Silvia S; Fitzgerald, Wendy; Zimmerberg, Joshua et al. (2007) Cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions regulate embryonic stem cell differentiation. Stem Cells 25:553-61
Hess, Samuel T; Gould, Travis J; Gudheti, Manasa V et al. (2007) Dynamic clustered distribution of hemagglutinin resolved at 40 nm in living cell membranes discriminates between raft theories. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104:17370-5
Chernomordik, Leonid V; Zimmerberg, Joshua; Kozlov, Michael M (2006) Membranes of the world unite! J Cell Biol 175:201-7
Zimmerberg, Joshua; Kozlov, Michael M (2006) How proteins produce cellular membrane curvature. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 7:9-19
Zimmerberg, Joshua; Gawrisch, Klaus (2006) The physical chemistry of biological membranes. Nat Chem Biol 2:564-7

Showing the most recent 10 out of 44 publications