Quantitative determination of virus-membrane fusion events Fusion of influenza virions with plasma membranes and membranes of endocytic vesicles in living cultured cells

Ofer Nussbaum, Abraham Loyter*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Incubation of fluorescently labeled influenza virus particles with living cultured cells such as lymphoma S-49 cells or hepatoma tissue culture cells resulted in a relatively high degree of fluorescence dequenching. Increase in the degree of fluorescence (35-40% fluorescence dequenching) was observed following incubation at pH 5.0 as well as at pH 7.4. On the other hand, incubation of fluorescently labeled influenza virions with erythrocyte ghosts resulted in fluorescence dequenching only upon incubation at pH 5.0. Only a low degree of fluorescence dequenching was observed upon incubation with inactivated unfusogenic influenza or with hemagglutinino-influenza virions. The results of the present work clearly suggest that the fluorescence dequenching observed at pH 5.0 resulted from fusion with the cells' plasma membranes, while that at pH 7.4 was with the membranes of endocytic vacuoles following endocytosis of the virus particles. Our results show that only the fluorescence dequenching observed at pH 7.4 - but not that obtained at pH 5.0 - was inhibited by lysosomotropic agents such as methylamine and ammonium chloride, or inhibitors of endocytosis such as EDTA and NaN3.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)61-67
Number of pages7
JournalFEBS Letters
Volume221
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 31 Aug 1987

Keywords

  • (Influenza virion)
  • Fluorescence dequenching
  • Virus-membrane fusion

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Quantitative determination of virus-membrane fusion events Fusion of influenza virions with plasma membranes and membranes of endocytic vesicles in living cultured cells'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this