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Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection

The Ebola fusion peptide (EBO(16)) is a hydrophobic domain that belongs to the GP2 membrane fusion protein of the Ebola virus. It adopts a helical structure in the presence of mimetic membranes that is stabilized by the presence of an aromatic-aromatic interaction established by Trp8 and Phe12. In s...

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Autores principales: Freitas, Mônica S., Follmer, Cristian, Costa, Lilian T., Vilani, Cecília, Bianconi, M. Lucia, Achete, Carlos Alberto, Silva, Jerson L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3020948/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21249196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015756
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author Freitas, Mônica S.
Follmer, Cristian
Costa, Lilian T.
Vilani, Cecília
Bianconi, M. Lucia
Achete, Carlos Alberto
Silva, Jerson L.
author_facet Freitas, Mônica S.
Follmer, Cristian
Costa, Lilian T.
Vilani, Cecília
Bianconi, M. Lucia
Achete, Carlos Alberto
Silva, Jerson L.
author_sort Freitas, Mônica S.
collection PubMed
description The Ebola fusion peptide (EBO(16)) is a hydrophobic domain that belongs to the GP2 membrane fusion protein of the Ebola virus. It adopts a helical structure in the presence of mimetic membranes that is stabilized by the presence of an aromatic-aromatic interaction established by Trp8 and Phe12. In spite of its infectious cycle becoming better understood recently, several steps still remain unclear, a lacuna that makes it difficult to develop strategies to block infection. In order to gain insight into the mechanism of membrane fusion, we probed the structure, function and energetics of EBO(16) and its mutant W8A, in the absence or presence of different lipid membranes, including isolated domain-resistant membranes (DRM), a good experimental model for lipid rafts. The depletion of cholesterol from living mammalian cells reduced the ability of EBO(16) to induce lipid mixing. On the other hand, EBO(16) was structurally sensitive to interaction with lipid rafts (DRMs), but the same was not observed for W8A mutant. In agreement with these data, W8A showed a poor ability to promote membrane aggregation in comparison to EBO(16). Single molecule AFM experiments showed a high affinity force pattern for the interaction of EBO(16) and DRM, which seems to be a complex energetic event as observed by the calorimetric profile. Our study is the first to show a strong correlation between the initial step of Ebola virus infection and cholesterol, thus providing a rationale for Ebola virus proteins being co-localized with lipid-raft domains. In all, the results show how small fusion peptide sequences have evolved to adopt highly specific and strong interactions with membrane domains. Such features suggest these processes are excellent targets for therapeutic and vaccine approaches to viral diseases.
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spelling pubmed-30209482011-01-19 Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection Freitas, Mônica S. Follmer, Cristian Costa, Lilian T. Vilani, Cecília Bianconi, M. Lucia Achete, Carlos Alberto Silva, Jerson L. PLoS One Research Article The Ebola fusion peptide (EBO(16)) is a hydrophobic domain that belongs to the GP2 membrane fusion protein of the Ebola virus. It adopts a helical structure in the presence of mimetic membranes that is stabilized by the presence of an aromatic-aromatic interaction established by Trp8 and Phe12. In spite of its infectious cycle becoming better understood recently, several steps still remain unclear, a lacuna that makes it difficult to develop strategies to block infection. In order to gain insight into the mechanism of membrane fusion, we probed the structure, function and energetics of EBO(16) and its mutant W8A, in the absence or presence of different lipid membranes, including isolated domain-resistant membranes (DRM), a good experimental model for lipid rafts. The depletion of cholesterol from living mammalian cells reduced the ability of EBO(16) to induce lipid mixing. On the other hand, EBO(16) was structurally sensitive to interaction with lipid rafts (DRMs), but the same was not observed for W8A mutant. In agreement with these data, W8A showed a poor ability to promote membrane aggregation in comparison to EBO(16). Single molecule AFM experiments showed a high affinity force pattern for the interaction of EBO(16) and DRM, which seems to be a complex energetic event as observed by the calorimetric profile. Our study is the first to show a strong correlation between the initial step of Ebola virus infection and cholesterol, thus providing a rationale for Ebola virus proteins being co-localized with lipid-raft domains. In all, the results show how small fusion peptide sequences have evolved to adopt highly specific and strong interactions with membrane domains. Such features suggest these processes are excellent targets for therapeutic and vaccine approaches to viral diseases. Public Library of Science 2011-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3020948/ /pubmed/21249196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015756 Text en Freitas et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Freitas, Mônica S.
Follmer, Cristian
Costa, Lilian T.
Vilani, Cecília
Bianconi, M. Lucia
Achete, Carlos Alberto
Silva, Jerson L.
Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection
title Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection
title_full Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection
title_fullStr Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection
title_full_unstemmed Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection
title_short Measuring the Strength of Interaction between the Ebola Fusion Peptide and Lipid Rafts: Implications for Membrane Fusion and Virus Infection
title_sort measuring the strength of interaction between the ebola fusion peptide and lipid rafts: implications for membrane fusion and virus infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3020948/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21249196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015756
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