Secretory and viral fusion may share mechanistic events with fusion between curved lipid bilayers

被引:79
作者
Lee, J [1 ]
Lentz, BR [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Sch Med, Dept Biochem & Biophys, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.95.16.9274
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Activation energies for the individual steps of secretory and viral fusion are reported to he large [Oberhauser, A. F,, Monck, J, R. & Fernandez, J, M, (1992) Biophys. J. 61, 800-809; Clague, M, J,, Schoch, C,, Zech, L, & Blumenthal, R. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 1303-1308]. Understanding the cause for these large activation energies is crucial to defining the mechanisms of these two types of biological membrane fusion, We showed recently that the fusion of protein-free model lipid bilayers mimics the sequence of steps observed during secretory and viral fusion, suggesting that these processes mag involve common lipid, rather than protein, rearrangements. To test for this possibility, we determined the activation energies for the three steps that we were able to distinguish as contributing to the fusion of protein-free model lipid bilayers, Activation energies for lipid rearrangements associated with formation of the reversible first intermediate, with conversion of this to a semi-stable second intermediate, and with irreversible fusion pore formation were 37 kcal/mol, 27 kcal/moI, and 22 kcal/mol, respectively. The first and last of these were comparable to the activation energies observed for membrane lipid exchange (42 kcal/moI) during viral fusion and for the rate of fusion pore opening during secretory granule release (23 kcal/mol), This striking similarity suggests strongly that the basic molecular processes involved in secretory and viral fusion involve a set of lipid molecule rearrangements that also are involved in model membrane fusion.
引用
收藏
页码:9274 / 9279
页数:6
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1968, An introduction to probability theory and its applications
[2]   INTERMEDIATES AND KINETICS OF MEMBRANE-FUSION [J].
BENTZ, J .
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1992, 63 (02) :448-459
[3]   Dilation of the influenza hemagglutinin fusion pore revealed by the kinetics of individual cell-cell fusion events [J].
Blumenthal, R ;
Sarkar, DP ;
Durell, S ;
Howard, DE ;
Morris, SJ .
JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1996, 135 (01) :63-71
[4]   FINAL STEPS IN EXOCYTOSIS OBSERVED IN A CELL WITH GIANT SECRETORY GRANULES [J].
BRECKENRIDGE, LJ ;
ALMERS, W .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1987, 84 (07) :1945-1949
[5]   MODULATION OF POLY(ETHYLENE GLYCOL)-INDUCED FUSION BY MEMBRANE HYDRATION - IMPORTANCE OF INTERBILAYER SEPARATION [J].
BURGESS, SW ;
MCINTOSH, TJ ;
LENTZ, BR .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1992, 31 (10) :2653-2661
[6]   FLUORESCENCE LIFETIME MEASUREMENTS TO MONITOR MEMBRANE LIPID MIXING [J].
BURGESS, SW ;
LENTZ, BR .
METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY, 1993, 220 :42-50
[7]   Flickering fusion pores comparable with initial exocytotic pores occur in protein-free phospholipid bilayers [J].
Chanturiya, A ;
Chernomordik, LV ;
Zimmerberg, J .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1997, 94 (26) :14423-14428
[8]   GATING KINETICS OF PH-ACTIVATED MEMBRANE-FUSION OF VESICULAR STOMATITIS-VIRUS WITH CELLS - STOPPED-FLOW MEASUREMENTS BY DEQUENCHING OF OCTADECYLRHODAMINE FLUORESCENCE [J].
CLAGUE, MJ ;
SCHOCH, C ;
ZECH, L ;
BLUMENTHAL, R .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1990, 29 (05) :1303-1308
[9]   EFFECT OF PHASE-TRANSITION ON TRANSBILAYER MOVEMENT OF DIMYRISTOYL PHOSPHATIDYLCHOLINE IN UNILAMELLAR VESICLES [J].
DEKRUIJFF, B ;
VANZOELEN, EJJ .
BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA, 1978, 511 (01) :105-115
[10]   RELEASE OF SECRETORY PRODUCTS DURING TRANSIENT VESICLE FUSION [J].
DETOLEDO, GA ;
FERNANDEZCHACON, R ;
FERNANDEZ, JM .
NATURE, 1993, 363 (6429) :554-558