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Vol. 11, Issue 7, 2359-2371, July 2000
Section on Membrane Biology, Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biophysics, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1855
Submitted February 2, 2000; Revised April 3, 2000; Accepted April 28, 2000| |
ABSTRACT |
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Fusion mediated by influenza hemagglutinin (HA), a prototype fusion protein, is commonly detected as lipid and content mixing between fusing cells. Decreasing the surface density of fusion-competent HA inhibited these advanced fusion phenotypes and allowed us to identify an early stage of fusion at physiological temperature. Although lipid flow between membranes was restricted, the contacting membrane monolayers were apparently transiently connected, as detected by the transformation of this fusion intermediate into complete fusion after treatments known to destabilize hemifusion diaphragms. These reversible connections disappeared within 10-20 min after application of low pH, indicating that after the energy released by HA refolding dissipated, the final low pH conformation of HA did not support membrane merger. Although the dynamic character and the lack of lipid mixing at 37°C distinguish the newly identified fusion intermediate from the intermediate arrested at 4°C described previously, both intermediates apparently belong to the same family of restricted hemifusion (RH) structures. Because the formation of transient RH structures at physiological temperatures was as fast as fusion pore opening and required less HA, we hypothesize that fusion starts with the formation of multiple RH sites, only a few of which then evolve to become expanding fusion pores.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Influenza virus enters its host cell by fusing the viral envelope
with the endosome membrane. This fusion reaction is triggered by
acidification of endosome content and mediated by viral glycoprotein hemagglutinin (HA) (Wiley and Skehel, 1987
; White, 1996
). As
HA-mediated membrane fusion became a paradigm of the ubiquitous
protein-mediated fusion, numerous experimental approaches were applied
to study low pH-triggered conformational change in HA (Carr and Kim,
1993
; Bullough et al., 1994
; Krumbiegel et al.,
1994
; Carr et al., 1997
; Gray and Tamm, 1998
; Chen et
al., 1999
; Epand et al., 1999
; Korte et al.,
1999
) and membrane rearrangements in fusion (Stegmann et
al., 1990
; Melikyan et al., 1993
, 1995b
, 1997
; Tse
et al., 1993
; Kemble et al., 1994
; Zimmerberg
et al., 1994
; Blumenthal et al., 1995
;
Chernomordik et al., 1997
, 1998
).
At physiological temperature and high surface density of low
pH-activated HA, membrane fusion is first detected as a fast formation
of a small fusion pore connecting aqueous volumes initially separated
by the membranes. Within a few seconds, fusion pore opening is followed
by mixing of membrane lipids and irreversible expansion of the pore
(Tse et al., 1993
; Zimmerberg et al., 1994
; Blumenthal et al., 1996
). Replacing the transmembrane domain
of HA with a lipid anchor (Kemble et al., 1994
; Melikyan
et al., 1995b
) or decreasing either the surface density of
activated wild-type HA or the temperature (Melikyan et al.,
1997
; Chernomordik et al., 1998
) allowed identification of a
less advanced fusion phenotype, hemifusion, which is characterized by
merger of only contacting monolayers of the membranes with no opening
of a fusion pore. Experimentally, this hemifusion state is detected as
lipid mixing in the absence of content mixing.
Fusion is even more impaired at 4°C (Stegmann et al.,
1990
; Schoch et al., 1992
; Chernomordik et al.,
1998
). Fusion between HA-expressing cells (HA-cells) and RBC triggered
by application of low pH at 4°C is reversibly blocked upstream of
both lipid mixing and fusion pore opening. Increasing the temperature
to 37°C allows the completion of the fusion reaction. At the
4°C-arrested stage (also referred to as the frozen intermediate of
fusion), contacting monolayers of the membranes are apparently
connected but lipid redistribution through the hemifusion site is
restricted by the low pH-activated HA trimers and observed only after
application of treatments that destabilize hemifusion diaphragm
(Chernomordik et al., 1998
). Hereafter, membrane merger with
this set of properties will be referred to as restricted hemifusion
(RH).
Characterization of the 4°C-arrested stage as a possible long-living
RH, and a recent finding of an RH phenotype at room temperature for a
mutant HA (Melikyan et al., 1999
), strengthened the
hypothesis that complete fusion proceeds through a transient RH
intermediate (Kemble et al., 1994
; Melikyan et
al., 1995b
, 1999
; Chernomordik et al., 1998
). However,
it remained possible that for wild-type HA, RH forms only at 4°C and
is not a part of a normal fusion pathway.
The membrane contact area is large enough to allow formation of
multiple fusion sites (Zimmerberg et al., 1994
), which
complicates the detection of hypothetical RH structures. Less advanced
fusion phenotypes in the emerging hierarchy of fusion phenotypes
from RH (neither fusion pore nor lipid mixing), to unrestricted hemifusion (UH; lipid mixing in the absence of a fusion pore), to complete fusion
(expanding fusion pore and lipid mixing)
are undetectable in the
presence of more advanced phenotypes. For instance, formation of a
single expanding fusion pore between an HA-cell and an RBC defines this
contact zone as a complete fusion phenotype even if there are hundreds
of hemifusion and/or RH sites present.
In this work, to study early fusion intermediates at physiological
temperature, we slowed down the formation of advanced fusion intermediates by decreasing the number of activated HA molecules. We
identified a new fusion intermediate that apparently belongs to the
same family of RH intermediates as frozen intermediate of fusion
(Chernomordik et al., 1998
). However, in contrast to frozen
intermediate of fusion, which maintains RH structure only at 4°C, the
newly identified intermediate demonstrated RH phenotype even at 37°C.
In addition, RH at physiological temperature was found to be a
reversible membrane intermediate that disappeared within minutes after
application of low pH. Our results suggest that multiple RH
intermediates are formed and present in the contact zone before an
opening of the first fusion pore. Formation and stabilization of
transient RH intermediates, and their progression to more advanced
fusion stages to allow lipid and content mixing, all use the energy
released by conformational changes in HA.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Preparation of Cells and Fusion Experiments
X31 HA-cells (HA300a cells expressing X:31 HA), GPI-HA cells
(BHA-PI cells expressing the glycosylphosphatidylinositol
[GPI]-anchored ectodomain of X:31 HA [Kemble et al.,
1993
]), and Japan HA-cells (HAb2 cells expressing A/Japan/305/57 HA
[Doxsey et al., 1985
]) were grown as described. Human RBC,
freshly isolated from whole blood, were labeled with fluorescent lipid
PKH26 (Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO) and, in some experiments, with an
aqueous dye, 6-carboxyfluorescein, as described by Chernomordik
et al. (1997)
.
If not stated otherwise, HAb2 cells were treated with 5 µg/ml trypsin (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland) for 10 min at room temperature to cleave HA0 into its fusion-competent HA1-S-S-HA2 form. For HA300a cells, trypsin (5 µg/ml) was supplemented with neuraminidase (0.5 U/ml; Sigma) to improve binding of RBC. The enzymes were applied together for 10 min at room temperature. To terminate the reaction, HA-cells were washed twice with complete medium containing 10% FBS. After two washings with PBS, cells were incubated for 10 min with a 1-ml suspension of RBC (0.01% hematocrit). HA-cells with 0-2 bound RBC per cell were washed three times with PBS to remove unbound RBC and then used. When measuring RBC binding to cells, several areas of the dish were selected. We screened at least 200 cells to find the average number of RBC bound to each HA-cell.
To trigger fusion, HA-cells with bound RBC were incubated in PBS
titrated with citrate to acidic pH. The low pH pulse was ended by
replacing the acidic solution with PBS. The final extents of lipid and
content mixing were assayed at room temperature by fluorescence
microscopy as the ratio of dye-redistributed bound RBC to total bound
RBC (Chernomordik et al., 1998
). In each experiment, we
verified that the extents of lipid and content mixing reached the final
levels and did not increase further with time after low pH application.
In most experiments, final fusion extents were achieved within 20 min
after low pH application. Fusion completion after application of
chlorpromazine (CPZ) or hypotonic osmotic shock (HOS) was much faster
and reached the final lipid- and content- mixing extents within 5 min.
In some experiments, cells with bound RBC were treated with neuraminidase, proteinase K, or thermolysin (Sigma). Washing cells twice with complete medium terminated the reactions.
Because fusion extents and kinetics varied from day to day, apparently as a result of variation in the level of HA expression, we routinely started the experiments by choosing the precise conditions of the low pH treatment. Each experiment presented here was repeated at least three times, and all functional dependencies reported were observed in each experiment. The data presented were averaged from the same set of experiments.
Application of Exogenous Lipids, CPZ, and HOS
Stock solutions of lauroyl lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC; Avanti
Polar Lipids, Birmingham, AL) and oleic acid (Sigma) were freshly
prepared as a 0.5% (wt/wt) aqueous dispersion and 25 mM ethanolic
solution, respectively. The cell medium bathing the plastic-attached
HA-cells with bound RBC was replaced with 0.5 ml of PBS supplemented
with LPC or oleic acid (Chernomordik et al., 1997
). If not
stated otherwise, low pH medium (used to trigger fusion) and
"normal" pH medium (used to terminate the low pH treatment) were
supplemented with the same concentration of lipid.
CPZ (Sigma) was prepared as a 0.25-0.5 mM solution in PBS. HA-cells with bound RBC were treated with low pH medium, returned to neutral pH, and exposed to CPZ-containing solution for 20-60 s.
To induce swelling of cells (HOS), we placed HA-cells with bound RBC
into hypotonic medium (PBS diluted with water, 1:3), as described by
Melikyan et al. (1995b)
Cell Surface ELISA
The percentage of HA trimers that undergo a low pH-induced
conformational change was evaluated by cell surface ELISA (CELISA) performed with LC89 antibody (kindly provided by Dr. Stephen Wharton, Division of Virology, National Institute for Medical Research, London,
United Kingdom). This antibody recognizes the low pH conformation but
not the initial conformation of HA (Daniels et al., 1983
). The X31 HA-cells were treated with different pH media at different temperatures and fixed for 10 min at room temperature in 4% (wt/vol) paraformaldehyde. After four washes with Ca- and Mg-free PBS, cells
were incubated for 5 min in 5% FBS in PBS, and the surface HA was
reacted with a 1:100 dilution of the LC89 antibodies (mouse immunoglobulin G) for 1 h at room temperature followed by three washes and a 5-min incubation in 5% FBS in Ca- and Mg-free PBS. The
cells were then incubated for 60 min at room temperature in the same
medium supplemented with a 1:1000 dilution of sheep anti-mouse immunoglobulin G conjugated with HRP (Amersham, Piscataway, NJ). After
four washes, tetramethylbenzidine microwell peroxidase substrate 1-component (Kirkegaard & Perry Laboratories, Gaithersburg, MD) was used for detection as recommended by the manufacturer. The absorbance at 450 nm was measured on a microplate reader (THERMOmax, Molecular Devices; Sunnyvale, CA). After subtracting nonspecific binding, the relative level of low pH conformation of HA was compared with the maximal extent observed in the experiment in which the cells
were incubated at pH 4.8 for 5 min at 37°C. The latter value was
taken as 100%.
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RESULTS |
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Experimental Approach
Open and closed bars in Figure 1A
represent the percentages of RBC and X31 HA-cell pairs with content and
lipid dyes, respectively, transferred from labeled RBC to HA-cells.
Lipid mixing in the absence of content mixing (UH) is seen here as the
difference between lipid mixing and content mixing extents, i.e., the
closed band at the top of each open bar. For the same 2-min duration of
low pH application at 37°C, increasing the pH of the
fusion-triggering medium from 4.8 to 5.1 caused a fivefold decrease in
the number of activated HA-cells, as assayed by CELISA. This decrease
lowered the extents of both lipid and content mixing and shifted the
prevailing fusion phenotype from mostly complete fusion to UH (Figure
1A, bars 1 and 3) (Chernomordik et al., 1998
). Because some
fusion pores are too small to allow the transfer of our aqueous dye
carboxyfluorescein, some of the cell contacts scored here as UH
probably have small pores detectable by electrophysiological technique
(Tse et al., 1993
; Zimmerberg et al., 1994
).
However, distinguishing between UH and a situation with a small
nonexpanding fusion pore is not crucial for the present study. The
decrease in the number of low pH-activated HA molecules inhibits
fusion pore formation much more strongly than lipid mixing
(Chernomordik et al., 1998
), and we will focus here on the
situation in which even lipid mixing is profoundly inhibited.
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At pH 5.3 (2 min, 37°C), the number of low pH-activated HA-cells
decreased to 6% of the total number of HA. Under these conditions, neither content nor even lipid mixing was observed (Figure 1A, bars 5).
We hypothesized that some of the membrane contacts with no lipid mixing
could contain local hemifusion connections that either somehow
restricted lipid flow or were too short-lived to allow measurable lipid
exchange. To detect such hypothetical RH intermediates, we used
indirect experimental approaches based on transforming RH into either
UH or complete fusion, both of which can be detected easily as lipid
mixing or lipid and content mixing. These approaches (short-term
application of HOS or CPZ and partial proteolysis) were developed
previously for UH and 4°C-arrested intermediate (Melikyan et
al., 1995b
, 1997
; Chernomordik et al., 1998
). HOS
stresses and breaks the hemifusion diaphragm (Melikyan et
al., 1995b
), and CPZ is thought to preferentially partition to and
destabilize the inner membrane monolayers, which form the diaphragm
(Melikyan et al., 1997
). Partial proteolysis apparently
cleaves some of the HA molecules, which restrict lipid flow through RH,
and thus allow the detection of this intermediate (Chernomordik
et al., 1998
).
As shown below, we indeed found transient fusion intermediates with a set of properties expected from the hypothetical RH intermediates. Although the exact structure of these intermediates remains uncertain, we refer to them below as transient RH.
Low pH- and HA-dependent Formation of RH at Physiological Temperature
In the experiment presented in Figure 1A (bars 6), X31 HA-cells with bound RBC were first treated with a 2-min pulse of pH 5.3 and then, already at neutral pH, with a 1-min CPZ pulse. CPZ application caused a fast and significant increase in the extent of both lipid and content mixing (bars 6) compared with those observed after the low pH pulse without CPZ application (bars 5). The extent of lipid mixing observed after a 1-min CPZ pulse did not change for CPZ concentrations in the range from 0.2 to 0.5 mM used in this study (our unpublished results). CPZ pulse also promoted fusion when applied after treating cells with pH 4.8 and 5.1 (bars 2 versus 1 and bars 4 versus 3).
CPZ promotion of lipid and content mixing was also observed at 22°C
(Figure 1B). CPZ pulse application at the same temperature (22°C)
gave a higher extent of fusion if applied after low pH incubation at 37 versus 22°C. The percentages of activated HA at 22 and 37°C
measured by CELISA were very close (8.2 ± 1.5% versus 6.4 ± 0.7%, respectively, mean ± SE of quadruplicate
determinations). The difference between the number of CPZ-detected
fusion intermediates developed at 37 and 22°C for the same number of
low pH-activated HA-cells might reflect the difference in HA mobility
(Junankar and Cherry, 1986
) and/or in the rate of HA refolding beyond
an early conformational change assayed with LC89 antibody (White and
Wilson, 1987
).
A significant increase in the extent of lipid mixing in the
experiments in which application of mildly acidic pH was followed by a
CPZ pulse was also observed for RBC fusion to Japan HA-cells and upon
replacing a CPZ pulse with a short-term application of HOS (PBS diluted
with water, pH 7.4) (Figure 2A). In this
experiment, Japan HA-cells with bound RBC were incubated at pH 5.35 for
different times. Immediately after the end of a low pH pulse, we
treated cells with CPZ or HOS. After these treatments, some of the
RBC/HA-cell contacts, which did not allow PKH26 transfer in the control
experiment (neither CPZ nor HOS applied), demonstrated lipid mixing.
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Our results suggested the existence of RH intermediates that allow neither lipid nor content mixing but were transformed into measurable fusion by CPZ or HOS application. The percentage of RBC/HA-cell contacts that developed lipid mixing only after CPZ pulse can be as high as 50-80% (for instance, subtracting bars 3 from bars 4 in Figure 1A indicates that ~80% of all contacts contained RH intermediates). CPZ application was always more effective than HOS in promoting lipid mixing, suggesting that some RH intermediates were not detected with HOS. CPZ was also more efficient than HOS in transforming GPI-HA-mediated hemifusion into complete fusion (our unpublished results).
RH intermediates were formed by the low pH-activated HA molecules. No PKH26 redistribution was observed in the negative controls, in which either CPZ or HOS was applied to X31 or Japan RBC/HA-cell pairs not exposed to acidic pH or exposed to acidic pH but without previous trypsinization to cleave HA0 into the fusion-competent HA1-S-S-HA2 form (our unpublished results).
The inability of uncleaved HA0 to undergo a low pH-dependent
conformational change and mediate fusion (White et al.,
1981
) was also used in the following experiment. We decreased the
trypsin concentration to decrease the percentage of cleaved, and
therefore, fusion-competent, HA molecules (Clague et al.,
1991
). At decreased surface density of cleaved HA, even a 2-min
application of the "optimal" pH 4.9 medium at 37°C yielded mostly
RH intermediates (Figure 2B).
To summarize, inhibition of lipid and content mixing by decreasing either the efficiency of HA activation (by application of less acidic pH) or the total number of fusion-competent HA-cells allowed us to detect low pH-triggered, HA-dependent formation of RH intermediates at physiological temperature. Because the properties of RH intermediates formed by X31 and Japan HA were very similar, most of the results will be presented for only one of the two strains of HA.
Time Course of RH Formation and Dissociation
At physiological temperature, RH is a dynamic intermediate. RH formation developed within 35 s after decreasing pH. These intermediates were detected in the experiments in which X31 RBC/HA-cell pairs were exposed to a short, 15-s pulse of pH 4.9 at 37°C followed immediately by a 20-s CPZ pulse (Figure 2C).
Most importantly, RH formed at physiological temperature is a
transient, reversible intermediate. The longer the time interval between low pH and CPZ pulses, the lower the extent of the lipid mixing
observed. Although the number of bound RBC stayed constant throughout
the experiment (our unpublished results), the promotion of lipid mixing
by CPZ was decreased significantly if CPZ was applied 15 min after the
end of the low pH pulse (Figure 3A). A
qualitatively similar time course of RH dissociation was detected for
cells expressing either X31 or Japan HA and also in the experiments in
which the CPZ pulse was replaced with HOS. Similar results (transient
state at which lipid and content mixing can be promoted by CPZ or HOS
application) were also obtained for GPI-HA cells (our unpublished
results).
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The decrease in the number of RH intermediates detected by CPZ or HOS with time after low pH pulse (Figure 3) may reflect a gradual dissociation of RH intermediates, with only a fraction of the intermediates detected immediately after a low pH pulse still present 15 min later. Alternatively, the lifetime of each RH intermediate can be much shorter than the tens of minutes within which RH became undetectable. In this scenario, the time of RH disappearance characterizes the gradual decrease in the number of de novo forming, very short-lived RH intermediates present at the moment of CPZ or HOS application. If this latter scenario is correct, application of the second CPZ pulse before the disappearance of RH would detect additional RH sites. In this case, the extent of lipid mixing after the application of two CPZ pulses consecutively (the first one immediately after low pH pulse [time 0] and the second pulse at time t) should correspond to the sum of the extents of lipid mixing after single CPZ pulses applied in the separate experiments at time 0 and time t (triangles in Figure 3B). The lack of any increase in the total extent of X31 RBC/HA-cell fusion after the second CPZ pulse (Figure 3B) indicated that all RH intermediates were already present at the time of the first CPZ pulse. We conclude that all RH intermediates detected by a CPZ pulse 20 min after the end of a low pH treatment were already present immediately after it, at the time of the first CPZ pulse application. Thus, the lifetime of RH intermediates can be estimated from the time course of RH disappearance and is ~10-20 min. The validity of the experimental design with application of two subsequent CPZ pulses was justified by the following control experiment. The extent of lipid mixing, observed when low pH application to X31 HA-cells with bound RBC was immediately followed by CPZ pulse, was not altered if the low pH pulse was preceded by an additional CPZ pulse (our unpublished results).
To summarize, for a few minutes after acidification, the membranes are tied together by a reversible RH connection.
Effects of 4°C and Exogenous Lipids on Transient RH
The lifetime of RH intermediates was greatly increased at
4°C (Figure 4A). We first formed
transient RH by applying a low pH pulse at 22°C and then decreased
the temperature to 4°C. Cells were incubated on ice for different
times, returned to 22°C, and immediately treated with CPZ to assay
for RH. CPZ application after 20 or 90 min (bars 2 and 3, respectively)
of incubation of the cells at 4°C gave similar extents of lipid
mixing to that observed when CPZ was applied at 22°C immediately
after the low pH pulse (bar 1). Thus, there was no RH inactivation
during 90 min of incubation at 4°C (compare with the profound
inactivation of RH intermediates after 20 min at 22°C [bar 4]). In
the experiment presented in Figure 4A, bar 5, we applied CPZ at 4°C
to determine whether RH intermediates were present before increasing
the temperature. Although less RH was detected when CPZ was applied at
4°C than at 22°C, perhaps reflecting less efficient partition of
CPZ into membranes at 4°C, RH intermediates were present at 4°C
rather than reappearing from some pre-RH structures upon increasing
temperature. This finding and the lack of inactivation of RH at 4°C
indicated that the properties of the RH intermediates were conserved
during cell incubation at 4°C. Similar results were obtained for
Japan HA-cells (our unpublished results).
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Membrane fusion, and in particular HA-mediated fusion, may be modulated
by altering membrane lipid composition (Chernomordik et al.,
1995
, 1997
). The effects of different lipids on fusion correlate with
their dynamic molecular shape. Inverted cone-shaped LPC inhibits, and
cone-shaped oleic acid promotes, membrane merger in complete fusion and
UH. RH formation was also inhibited by LPC present during a low pH
pulse (our unpublished results). Even if LPC was added after the low pH
pulse, at the time when RH intermediates were already formed, neither
CPZ nor HOS promoted lipid mixing as long as LPC was present (Figure
4B).
In the experiment presented in Figure 4C we formed transient RH by treating Japan HA-cells with bound RBC with a pH 5.3 pulse at 22°C. In the LPC-free PBS, the number of RH intermediates decreased dramatically within 10 min after a low pH pulse, indicating rapid inactivation of the HA machinery responsible for RH formation (compare bars 2 and 1). However, if low pH pulse was followed by a 10-min incubation with LPC, the percentage of RH detected immediately upon LPC removal (bar 3) was almost the same as that seen right after low pH pulse in the control experiment with no LPC added (bar 1). Within 10 min after washing LPC out, we detected almost no RH intermediates (bar 4). Thus, removal of LPC resulted in the formation and subsequent inactivation of the RH intermediates with a rate similar to that in control experiments with no LPC added. These results indicated that although there were no RH intermediates in the presence of LPC, the machinery responsible for their formation remained intact and ready to form RH after LPC was washed out.
Although LPC slowed down inactivation of the HA machinery supporting RH, cone-shaped oleic acid accelerated RH disappearance after low pH pulse (Figure 4D). Similar results (Figure 4, C and D) were also obtained for X31 HA-cells (our unpublished results).
In brief, LPC prevents the formation of transient RH and dissociates or shrinks already formed RH intermediates. In parallel, LPC slowed down, and oleic acid accelerated, the disappearance of the structures responsible for RH development.
HA Stabilizes RH and Restricts Lipid Flow
The role of HA in stabilization of the transient RH intermediates
and in lipid flow restriction was probed by studying the sensitivity of
these intermediates to proteolysis with thermolysin or proteinase K,
the enzymes known to cleave low pH conformations of HA (Wiley and
Skehel, 1987
). In the experiment presented in Figure
5A, we formed transient RH connections
(bar 2) and, immediately after the end of the low pH pulse, treated the
cells with 40 µg/ml thermolysin for 1 min. After this treatment,
almost no lipid mixing was observed either with or without CPZ
application (bars 5 and 4, respectively). In contrast, partial cleaving
of the activated HA molecules with very mild thermolysin treatment (2 µg/ml, 10 s) led to a statistically significant increase in
lipid dye redistribution between cells (bar 3) compared with that
observed in the control experiment with neither thermolysin nor CPZ
applied (bar 1). Because neither CPZ nor HOS was needed to cause this
lipid mixing, we conclude that cleaving a fraction of activated HA
molecules facilitated lipid flow through the preexisting RH.
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In the control experiments, treating cells with thermolysin or proteinase K before low pH application did not affect the fusion observed after subsequent application of a low pH pulse followed or not followed by CPZ. One may hypothesize that lipid mixing observed after mild proteolysis of the cells with the RH intermediates with thermolysin or proteinase K was mediated by the peptide digestion products. However, the lack of lipid mixing after harsher treatments with the same proteases, and thus the significantly higher concentrations of these peptide fragments, argues against this possibility.
Disappearance of RH and facilitation of lipid mixing after harsh and very mild proteolysis, respectively, of the activated HA molecules were also observed for Japan and HA-cells with proteinase K treatment instead of thermolysin (our unpublished results).
These experiments indicated that low pH forms of HA both stabilize transient RH intermediates and restrict lipid mixing through them.
HA-independent End State in Unrestricted Hemifusion
Although stabilization of RH intermediates requires the continuous
presence of low pH forms of HA, membrane merger in UH reaches an
HA-independent long-lived state. We detected this end-state hemifusion
as a shift in the mechanism of RBC binding to HA-cells. Initial binding
between RBC and HA-cells is mediated by HA1-receptor connection and can
be inhibited by neuraminidase treatment (Chernomordik et
al., 1997
). After low pH application, this binding is complemented by additional, neuraminidase-insensitive binding mechanisms that are
still dependent on HA. This HA-dependent binding may involve insertion
of the HA fusion peptide into RBC and membrane merger. To study UH, we
shifted to cells expressing GPI-HA (Kemble et al., 1994
).
Within 5 min after low pH application to RBC/GPI-HA cell complexes,
almost half of the population of RBC, which had already been hemifused
to GPI-HA cells, as shown by membrane dye redistribution, could be
released by cleaving HA-dependent connections with proteinase K and
neuraminidase (Figure 5B). However, when we increased the time interval
between the low pH pulse and enzyme application to 10 min, the binding
between hemifused RBC and GPI-HA cells became almost insensitive to
proteinase K and neuraminidase. Application of a CPZ pulse to
RBC/GPI-HA cell pairs at this stage yielded the same extent of complete
fusion as that observed before enzymatic treatment (our unpublished
results). These results document the existence of an end-state
HA-independent hemifusion. Because under our conditions
GPI-HA-mediated lipid mixing reaches its final extent (i.e., the
maximal percentage of PKH26-redistributed cells) during 5 min of low pH
application, the onset of measurable lipid mixing in UH precedes the
establishment of end-state hemifusion. Similar results were obtained
for UH mediated by wild-type X31 HA (our unpublished results).
As shown above (Figure 4B), RH connections formed at physiological
temperature were reversibly dissociated by adding LPC. A similar effect
of LPC, i.e., reversible inhibition of CPZ-induced transformation of
hemifusion into complete fusion, was reported for GPI-HA-mediated UH
(Melikyan et al., 1997
). In the experiment presented in
Figure 5C, we tested whether this inhibition can be observed at
different stages of wild-type HA-mediated UH. We applied LPC and then
CPZ to X31 RBC/HA-cell pairs 5 min after a 2-min pulse of pH 5.2 at a
stage at which RBC binding and hemifusion were still HA-dependent (bars
2-4) and 30 min after the low pH pulse at the HA-independent end-state
hemifusion (bars 5-7). At the HA-dependent stage, as described by
Melikyan et al. (1997)
, LPC inhibited CPZ-induced
transformation from UH to complete fusion, measured as an increase in
the percentage of RBC, which transferred both PKH26 and
carboxyfluorescein to HA-cells (bars 3 versus bars 4). In contrast, for
the end-state hemifusion, LPC had no effect on CPZ-induced promotion of
complete fusion (bars 6 versus bars 7). Similar results were obtained
for UH mediated by GPI-HA (our unpublished results).
Thus, early UH intermediate, although already allowed lipid mixing, was stabilized by low pH-activated HA and inhibited by LPC. Once formed, these hemifusion intermediates progressed to HA-independent end-state hemifusion, which was not suppressible with LPC. The number of RBC bound in an HA-independent manner and the extent of complete fusion observed after CPZ application to RBC/GPI-HA cell pairs did not decrease with time for up to 2 h after low pH application (our unpublished results).
Switching the Fusion Phenotype to and from RH
Cells committed to complete fusion can be redirected to transient
RH by cleaving some of the low pH-activated HA trimers with proteinase
K (Figure 6). We committed X31 HA-cells
with bound RBC to complete fusion by applying a 5-min pulse of pH 4.9 but blocked fusion at the 4°C-arrested stage. Then, cells were
returned to neutral pH medium and treated with proteinase K, still at
4°C. The temperature was increased to 37°C, and fusion extent was
assayed with or without CPZ application. Proteinase K treatment, which strongly inhibited complete fusion, shifted the prevailing fusion phenotype toward RH intermediates, detectable only by CPZ application. At longer incubations with proteinase K, CPZ treatment did not cause
measurable fusion (see above). Thus, cleaving low pH-activated HA
gradually shifted the fusion phenotype from complete fusion to UH
(Chernomordik et al., 1998
), then to transient RH, and
finally to no fusion at all.
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RH Requires Concerted Action of Multiple Trimers in the Contact Zone
Establishment or stabilization of HA conformations, which form
transient RH, required the presence of the target membrane at the time
of low pH application. When X31 HA-cells were treated by a 2-min pH 5.3 pulse at 22°C, cooled to 4°C, and then incubated with RBC,
subsequent application of CPZ to X31 RBC/HA-cell pairs did not promote
any redistribution of PKH26 (Figure 7A).
Thus, no RH intermediates were developed under these conditions. In contrast, the identical pH pulse applied to X31 HA-cells with bound
RBC, followed by decreasing the temperature to 4°C, resulted in the
formation of transient RH intermediates, as indicated by CPZ-promoted
lipid mixing. Thus, formation of transient RH requires HA structures
that do not develop in the absence of cell contacts.
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Low pH application results in almost simultaneous activation of multiple HA molecules. RH formation can be mediated either by individual HA trimers or by concerted action of multiple trimers. In the former case, the formation of transient RH intermediates should depend only on the total number of activated HA molecules rather than on their simultaneous presence in the contact zones. To address this question, we compared the efficiency of RH formation in response to a 6-min pH 5.3 pulse with that obtained after applying 1-min and 5-min pulses of pH 5.3 separated by a 10-min interval (Figure 7B). Judging from the fusogenic activity, a significant part of HA molecules activated by a 6-min pulse was already activated after the first 1 min at low pH. When a 6-min pulse was divided into two pulses, transient RH intermediates induced by the first 1-min pulse were almost completely inactivated by the time of the second pulse application. The sum of the RH extents assayed by CPZ application after a 1-min low pH pulse, and, in a separate experiment, after a 5-min low pH pulse, was lower than that observed after a single 6-min pulse. Thus, the same total number of HA molecules formed more RH intermediates if these HA molecules were activated at the same time rather than in portions. This finding suggested that the formation of transient RH intermediates involves cooperative action of multiple HA trimers.
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DISCUSSION |
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Transient RH: Structure and Properties
We describe here an early and transient intermediate of wild-type
HA-mediated fusion at physiological temperature. This intermediate is
formed and supported by low pH-activated HA and can be transformed into complete fusion by application of either CPZ or HOS, the treatments known to break hemifusion diaphragm (Melikyan et
al., 1995b
, 1997
; Chernomordik et al., 1998
). We
interpret this intermediate as a hemifusion connection between the
contacting monolayers of the membranes. Could the identified fusion
intermediate correspond to a very tight proteinaceous transmembrane
connection that develops before actual merger of membrane bilayers? If
so, 1) LPC, an inhibitor of membrane hemifusion (Chernomordik, 1996
;
Chernomordik et al., 1997
), should prevent this contact and
dissociate it, if already formed; 2) CPZ and HOS treatment must
destabilize this contact state and transform it into complete fusion;
and 3) mild proteolysis with thermolysin or proteinase K must transform
some of these contacts into UH. The existence of a fusion intermediate
other than RH combining all these properties seems improbable. Thus, the transient transmembrane connection detected at low surface densities of low pH-activated HA is most likely a member of the family
of RH intermediates, all long-lived at 4°C, but differing in the
fusion phenotype at 37°C. Depending on the number of activated HA
molecules, upon the temperature increase different RH intermediates proceed to complete fusion, or UH, or, in case of transient RH, dissociate with time. Transient RH intermediates require fewer activated HA molecules than UH, which in turn requires fewer HA molecules than opening of a fusion pore (Chernomordik et
al., 1998
).
As a flickering fusion pore (Melikyan et al., 1995a
, 1999
)
that can repeatedly open and close during ~10 min of
electrophysiological recording (G. Melikyan, personal communication),
RH is a dynamic intermediate. During the 10-min lifetime of this
intermediate, the membranes either remain connected or dissociate and
remerge with high enough frequency to make each site detectable during a 30-s CPZ pulse. The possibility of reversible dissociation of RH
connections was substantiated by the experiments in which LPC either
trapped normally flickering RH in a dissociated state or dissociated
normally stable RH intermediates. LPC might shrink or dissociate
hemifusion connections by increasing their elastic energy, because
inverted cone-shaped LPC does not support the curvature of the lipid
monolayer required in a stalk-like local connection between membranes
(Chernomordik et al., 1995
, 1997
). Alternatively, shrinking
of the connections can be explained by compression of the outer
membrane monolayers with added exogenous lipid (Melikyan et
al., 1997
).
The dynamic character of the transient RH is in contrast to the properties of UH. It had been unknown whether HA-mediated UH is a stable structure or a transient intermediate allowing lipid flow. We found here that although UH starts with an early stage that is stabilized by HA and still can be suppressed by LPC, all hemifused cells, which demonstrated lipid mixing, eventually reach stable and HA-independent end-state hemifusion.
Mechanism of RH
All approaches used to emphasize transient RH over more advanced
fusion phenotypes (shorter low pH pulses, less acidic pH, lower surface
density of the fusion-competent HA) decreased the number of activated
HA molecules. It appears improbable that different "suboptimal"
activations result in the same suboptimal conformation of HA
specifically required for RH. In addition, low pH conformations of HA,
which are capable of mediating complete fusion at 37°C, can also
support RH, as demonstrated by the shift from complete fusion to the
transient RH phenotype upon cleaving of some of the activated HA
molecules. Thus, the transition from RH to UH and complete fusion
apparently reflects an increase in the number of activated HA molecules
rather than some specific change in their conformation. In particular,
our finding that HA conformations, which form and support RH, develop
only in the presence of the target membrane indicate that these
conformations differ from the stabilized activated HA conformations
induced by HA preincubation at mildly acidic pH in the absence of the
target membrane (Korte et al., 1999
).
RH formation apparently involves multiple HA trimers (Figure 7B).
Assuming that three to six activated HA trimers can mediate lipid
mixing and fusion pore opening (Blumenthal et al., 1996
; Danieli et al., 1996
; Bentz, 2000
; but see
Gunther-Ausborn et al., 2000
), RH formation may require just
two trimers. Alternatively, an identical fusion machine might generate
different fusion phenotypes with different probabilities. In this case,
increasing the number of activated HA molecules increases the number of
these fusion machines and thus allows realization of less probable and
more advanced fusion phenotypes. At present, we cannot distinguish between these two interpretations.
The disappearance of RH intermediates after HA proteolysis indicates
that the energy price of a membrane merger in early fusion intermediates is compensated for by the energy coming from HA refolding. This means that the membrane merger at RH and subsequent membrane rearrangements leading to opening of an expanding fusion pore
are energy-intensive stages, which argues against the hypothesis that
just bringing membrane lipid bilayers into close contact is sufficient
to allow spontaneous fusion of membrane lipid bilayers. The recent
finding that a point mutation within the transmembrane domain of HA
results in the RH phenotype at physiological temperature (Melikyan
et al., 1999
) corroborates the conclusion that the
transition from RH to a fusion pore is an HA-dependent process.
Even without proteolysis, RH formed at physiological temperature
disappeared rather rapidly. LPC, an inhibitor of hemifusion, and oleic
acid, a promoter of hemifusion, slow down and accelerate the
inactivation of RH, respectively. Thus, we hypothesize that membrane
merger mediates this inactivation. At an early stage of the low
pH-induced conformational change, the fusion peptide of HA inserts
into one of the fusing membranes (for review, see Gaudin et
al., 1995
). The energy released in the further refolding of HA can
then be applied to the membranes through the fusion peptide
(Weissenhorn et al., 1997
; Kozlov and Chernomordik, 1998
). Membrane merger allows relocation of the fusion peptide from the membrane in which it was initially inserted to another membrane by a
"membranous" path without peptide dissociation from the membrane. Fusion peptide relocation through the RH site before fusion completion discharges the loaded spring of HA (Carr and Kim, 1993
) and, thus, inactivates HA and dissociates HA-supported RH. The absence of RH
inactivation at 4°C can indicate that this temperature inhibits fusion peptide relocation. In addition, or alternatively, the energy
released in the low pH-induced HA refolding might drive dimpling of
the membranes toward each other (Weissenhorn et al., 1997
;
Kozlov and Chernomordik, 1998
). In this case, inverted cone-shaped LPC
and cone-shaped oleic acid in the outer membrane monolayers can
decrease and increase, respectively, the energy of the stressed membrane dimple developing in the fusion site, thus inhibiting or
accelerating dissipation of this energy and dissociation of RH.
Regardless of the mechanism of RH dissociation, the limited
lifetime of this intermediate indicates that just the presence of the
stable lowest energy HA conformation (Bullough et al., 1994
)
in the membrane contact zone is not sufficient to mediate membrane
merger or even support it when already formed. This conclusion is
consistent with the recent finding that a large polypeptide fragment of
the stable low pH form of HA2 does not induce lipid mixing between
liposomes at neutral pH (Epand et al., 1999
). Significant fusogenic activity of the same polypeptide at low pH is apparently mediated by low pH-dependent interactions between the polypeptide trimers (Kim et al., 1998
), suggesting that the energy for
fusion can come not only from the conformational change of individual HA trimers but also from their subsequent interactions. As soon as this
energy temporarily stored either in an intermediate HA conformation or
in membranes somehow primed for fusion (e.g., in the form of a strongly
curved membrane dimple [Kozlov and Chernomordik, 1998
]) dissipates,
RH dissociates.
Transient RH can be a key intermediate in the physiologically
relevant pathway leading to viral envelope fusion with an endosome membrane at the early stage of viral infection. RH intermediates were
detected within 35 s after decreasing the pH, and thus RH formation is as fast as fusion pore opening (Tse et al.,
1993
; Zimmerberg et al., 1994
; Chernomordik et
al., 1998
). Importantly, fewer low pH-activated HA molecules are
required to form RH than to open a fusion pore. The number of activated
HA molecules at the virus within the endosome may increase rather
slowly, because acidification of the endosome content to pH 5 takes up
to 50 min (Murphy et al., 1984
; Roederer et al.,
1987
). Thus, the conditions for RH formation should develop earlier
than those for fusion pore opening, suggesting that multiple RH
intermediates are present in the membrane contact zone at the time of
an opening of the first fusion pore.
To conclude, our results indicate that after low pH application, the
membrane contact zone contains a shifting distribution of multiple
membrane merger sites, with their phenotypes dependent on the local
surface density of activated HA, membrane lipid composition, and time
after low pH application. The emerging pathway is summarized in Figure
8. Because RH formation requires fewer
activated HA molecules than UH, and, in particular, complete fusion, we
hypothesize that at an early stage most of the merger sites represent
the newly identified transient RH intermediates (Figure 8, TRH).
Although RH intermediates are stabilized at 4°C (Figure 8B), at
physiological temperature most of these intermediates dissociate with
time and do not lead to successful fusion events. However, the sites
with local density of activated HA, either higher from the beginning or
increased because of additional HA molecules coming by lateral motion
to an already existing RH site, can evolve to allow lipid and content
mixing. If the local density of activated HA molecules is sufficient to
achieve UH (Figure 8, Ac2 and C), rearrangements may involve expansion
of the hemifusion diaphragm to an HA-independent, LPC-insensitive
state. At still higher surface densities of HA, activated HA molecules
open a fusion pore (Figure 8, FP) and thus complete the fusion
reaction.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We greatly appreciate Dr. Joshua Zimmerberg for his advice and numerous stimulating discussions. We thank Drs. Yuri A. Chizmadzhev, Michael Kozlov, Kamran Melikov, and Gregory Melikyan for many helpful discussions and critical review of the manuscript and Dr. Stephen A. Wharton for the kind gift of the LC89 antibodies.
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Note added in proof. |
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We note a work presenting electron micrographs of intermembrane contact sites in HA-mediated cell-cell fusion, which may relate to the transient RH intermediates described here. That work is: Frolov, V.A., Cho, M.-S., Bronk, P., Reese, T.S., and Zimmerberg, J. (2000). Multiple local contact sites are induced by GPI-linked influenza hemagglutinin during hemifusion and flickering pore formation. Traffic. (in press).
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. E-mail address: lchern{at}helix.nih.gov.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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Abbreviations used: CELISA, cell surface ELISA; CPZ, chlorpromazine; GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol; GPI-HA, HA ectodomain linked to GPI; HA, influenza virus hemagglutinin; HA-cell, HA-expressing cell; HOS, hypotonic osmotic shock; LPC, lysophosphatidylcholine; RH, restricted hemifusion; UH, unrestricted hemifusion.
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REFERENCES |
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