4.6 Article

Strategy for nonenveloped virus entry:: a hydrophobic conformer of the reovirus membrane penetration protein μ1 mediates membrane disruption

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 76, Issue 19, Pages 9920-9933

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.19.9920-9933.2002

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI46440, R29 AI39533, R01 AI046440] Funding Source: Medline

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The mechanisms employed by nonenveloped animal viruses to penetrate the membranes of their host cells remain enigmatic. Membrane penetration by the nonenveloped mammalian reoviruses is believed to deliver a partially uncoated, but still large (similar to70-nm), particle with active transcriptases for viral mRNA synthesis directly into the cytoplasm. This process is likely initiated by a particle form that resembles infectious subvirion particles (ISVPs), disassembly intermediates produced from virions by proteolytic uncoating. Consistent with that idea, ISVPs, but not virions, can induce disruption of membranes in vitro. Both activities ascribed to ISVP-like particles, membrane disruption in vitro and membrane penetration within cells, are linked to N-myristoylated outer-capsid protein mu1, present in 600 copies at the surfaces of ISVPs. To understand how mu1 fulfills its role as the reovirus penetration protein, we monitored changes in ISVPs during the permeabilization of red blood cells induced by these particles. Hemolysis was preceded by a major structural transition in ISVPs, characterized by conformational change in mu1 and elution of fibrous attachment protein sigma1. The altered conformer of mu1 was required for hemolysis and was markedly hydrophobic. The structural transition in ISVPs was further accompanied by derepression of genome-dependent mRNA synthesis by the particle-associated transcriptases. We propose a model for reovirus entry in which (i) primed and triggered conformational changes, analogous to those in enveloped-virus fusion proteins, generate a hydrophobic mu1 conformer capable of inserting into and disrupting cell membranes and (ii) activation of the viral particles for membrane interaction and mRNA synthesis are concurrent events. Reoviruses provide an opportune system for defining the molecular details of membrane penetration by a large nonenveloped animal virus.

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