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Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion

Several pathogens induce propulsive actin comet tails in cells they invade to disseminate their infection. They achieve this by recruiting factors for actin nucleation, the Arp2/3 complex, and polymerization regulators from the host cytoplasm. Owing to limited information on the structural organizat...

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Autores principales: Mueller, Jan, Pfanzelter, Julia, Winkler, Christoph, Narita, Akihiro, Le Clainche, Christophe, Nemethova, Maria, Carlier, Marie-France, Maeda, Yuichiro, Welch, Matthew D., Ohkawa, Taro, Schmeiser, Christian, Resch, Guenter P., Small, J. Victor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3891563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24453943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001765
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author Mueller, Jan
Pfanzelter, Julia
Winkler, Christoph
Narita, Akihiro
Le Clainche, Christophe
Nemethova, Maria
Carlier, Marie-France
Maeda, Yuichiro
Welch, Matthew D.
Ohkawa, Taro
Schmeiser, Christian
Resch, Guenter P.
Small, J. Victor
author_facet Mueller, Jan
Pfanzelter, Julia
Winkler, Christoph
Narita, Akihiro
Le Clainche, Christophe
Nemethova, Maria
Carlier, Marie-France
Maeda, Yuichiro
Welch, Matthew D.
Ohkawa, Taro
Schmeiser, Christian
Resch, Guenter P.
Small, J. Victor
author_sort Mueller, Jan
collection PubMed
description Several pathogens induce propulsive actin comet tails in cells they invade to disseminate their infection. They achieve this by recruiting factors for actin nucleation, the Arp2/3 complex, and polymerization regulators from the host cytoplasm. Owing to limited information on the structural organization of actin comets and in particular the spatial arrangement of filaments engaged in propulsion, the underlying mechanism of pathogen movement is currently speculative and controversial. Using electron tomography we have resolved the three-dimensional architecture of actin comet tails propelling baculovirus, the smallest pathogen yet known to hijack the actin motile machinery. Comet tail geometry was also mimicked in mixtures of virus capsids with purified actin and a minimal inventory of actin regulators. We demonstrate that propulsion is based on the assembly of a fishbone-like array of actin filaments organized in subsets linked by branch junctions, with an average of four filaments pushing the virus at any one time. Using an energy-minimizing function we have simulated the structure of actin comet tails as well as the tracks adopted by baculovirus in infected cells in vivo. The results from the simulations rule out gel squeezing models of propulsion and support those in which actin filaments are continuously tethered during branch nucleation and polymerization. Since Listeria monocytogenes, Shigella flexneri, and Vaccinia virus among other pathogens use the same common toolbox of components as baculovirus to move, we suggest they share the same principles of actin organization and mode of propulsion.
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spelling pubmed-38915632014-01-21 Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion Mueller, Jan Pfanzelter, Julia Winkler, Christoph Narita, Akihiro Le Clainche, Christophe Nemethova, Maria Carlier, Marie-France Maeda, Yuichiro Welch, Matthew D. Ohkawa, Taro Schmeiser, Christian Resch, Guenter P. Small, J. Victor PLoS Biol Research Article Several pathogens induce propulsive actin comet tails in cells they invade to disseminate their infection. They achieve this by recruiting factors for actin nucleation, the Arp2/3 complex, and polymerization regulators from the host cytoplasm. Owing to limited information on the structural organization of actin comets and in particular the spatial arrangement of filaments engaged in propulsion, the underlying mechanism of pathogen movement is currently speculative and controversial. Using electron tomography we have resolved the three-dimensional architecture of actin comet tails propelling baculovirus, the smallest pathogen yet known to hijack the actin motile machinery. Comet tail geometry was also mimicked in mixtures of virus capsids with purified actin and a minimal inventory of actin regulators. We demonstrate that propulsion is based on the assembly of a fishbone-like array of actin filaments organized in subsets linked by branch junctions, with an average of four filaments pushing the virus at any one time. Using an energy-minimizing function we have simulated the structure of actin comet tails as well as the tracks adopted by baculovirus in infected cells in vivo. The results from the simulations rule out gel squeezing models of propulsion and support those in which actin filaments are continuously tethered during branch nucleation and polymerization. Since Listeria monocytogenes, Shigella flexneri, and Vaccinia virus among other pathogens use the same common toolbox of components as baculovirus to move, we suggest they share the same principles of actin organization and mode of propulsion. Public Library of Science 2014-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3891563/ /pubmed/24453943 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001765 Text en © 2014 Mueller 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
Mueller, Jan
Pfanzelter, Julia
Winkler, Christoph
Narita, Akihiro
Le Clainche, Christophe
Nemethova, Maria
Carlier, Marie-France
Maeda, Yuichiro
Welch, Matthew D.
Ohkawa, Taro
Schmeiser, Christian
Resch, Guenter P.
Small, J. Victor
Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion
title Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion
title_full Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion
title_fullStr Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion
title_full_unstemmed Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion
title_short Electron Tomography and Simulation of Baculovirus Actin Comet Tails Support a Tethered Filament Model of Pathogen Propulsion
title_sort electron tomography and simulation of baculovirus actin comet tails support a tethered filament model of pathogen propulsion
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3891563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24453943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001765
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