The molecular mechanisms responsible for long-distance, directional spread of alphaherpesvirus infections via axons of infected neurons are poorly understood. We describe the use of red and green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions to capsid and tegument components, respectively, to visualize purified, single extracellular virions and axonal assemblies after pseudorabies virus (PRV) infection of cultured neurons. We observed heterogeneity in GFP fluorescence when GFP was fused to the tegument component VP22 in both single extracellular virions and discrete puncta in infected axons. This heterogeneity was observed in the presence or absence of a capsid structure detected by a fusion of monomeric red fluorescent protein to VP26. The similarity of the heterogeneous distribution of these fluorescent protein fusions in both purified virions and in axons suggested that tegument-capsid assembly and axonal targeting of viral components are linked. One possibility was that the assembly of extracellular and axonal particles containing the dually fluorescent fusion proteins occurred by the same process in the cell body. We tested this hypothesis by treating infected cultured neurons with brefeldin A, a potent inhibitor of herpesvirus maturation and secretion. Brefeldin A treatment disrupted the neuronal secretory pathway, affected fluorescent capsid and tegument transport in the cell body, and blocked subsequent entry into axons of capsid and tegument proteins. Electron microscopy demonstrated that in the absence of brefeldin A treatment, enveloped capsids entered axons, but in the presence of the inhibitor, unenveloped capsids accumulated in the cell body. These results support an assembly process in which PRV capsids acquire a membrane in the cell body prior to axonal entry and subsequent transport.A remarkable property of the alphaherpesvirus life cycle in the natural host is invasion and controlled spread within the peripheral nervous system (PNS) with exceedingly rare incursions into the central nervous system. The basic unit of a herpesvirus infection is the extracellular virion, a complex particle comprising several thousand protein molecules (31). Herpes virions, in general, are approximately 200 nm in diameter with a membrane envelope containing more than 12 virusborne membrane proteins. This host-derived membrane surrounds a tegument layer of at least 12 soluble proteins, which, in turn, surrounds an icosahedral capsid containing the 142-kb genome (36, 59). The assembly and movement of these distinct virion structures must be understood at the cellular level as these properties directly influence herpesvirus pathogenesis and transmission. Pseudorabies virus (PRV), an animal pathogen, has served as a model for study of directional spread of the neurotropic herpesviruses, which include the human pathogens herpes simplex virus (HSV) and varicella-zoster virus (VZV). After replication of PRV at exposed mucosal surfaces, virion components enter the axon terminals of PNS neurons, and unenveloped capsids move toward the c...
During budding of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), the viral matrix (M) protein binds the viral nucleocapsid to the host plasma membrane and condenses the nucleocapsid into the tightly coiled nucleocapsid-M protein (NCM) complex observed in virions. In infected cells, the viral M protein exists mostly as a soluble molecule in the cytoplasm, and a small amount is bound to the plasma membrane. Despite the high concentrations of M protein and intracellular nucleocapsids in the cytoplasm, they are not associated with each other except at the sites of budding. The experiments presented here address the question of why M protein and nucleocapsids associate with each other only at the plasma membrane but not in the cytoplasm of infected cells. An assay for exchange of soluble M protein into NCM complexes in vitro was used to show that both cytosolic and membrane-derived M proteins bound to virion NCM complexes with affinities similar to that observed for virion M protein, indicating that both cytosolic and membrane-derived M proteins are competent for virus assembly. However, neither cytosolic nor membrane-derived M protein bound to intracellular nucleocapsids with the same high affinity observed for virion NCM complexes. Cytosolic M protein was able to bind intracellular nucleocapsids, but with an affinity approximately eightfold less than that observed in virion NCM complexes. Membrane-derived M protein exhibited little or no binding activity for intracellular nucleocapsids. These data indicate that intracellular nucleocapsids, and not intracellular M proteins, need to undergo an assembly-initiating event in order to assemble into an NCM complex. Since neither membrane-derived nor cytosolic M protein could initiate high-affinity binding to intracellular nucleocapsids, the results suggest that another viral or host factor is required for assembly of the NCM complex observed in virions.
The goal of these experiments was to determine the steps in virus assembly that are defective at the nonpermissive temperature in temperature-sensitive (ts) matrix (M) protein mutants of vesicular stomatitis virus. It has been proposed that mutations in M protein either reduce the binding affinity for nucleocapsids or lead to aggregation, reducing the amount of M protein available for virus assembly. Cytosolic or membrane-derived M proteins from wild-type VSV and two ts M protein mutant viruses, tsM301 and tsO23, as well as a revertant of tsO23 virus, O23R1, were analyzed for binding to nucleocapsid-M protein (NCM) complexes and for M protein aggregation. The experiments presented here showed that ts M proteins synthesized at the nonpermissive temperature were capable of binding to nucleocapsids and that aggregation of ts M proteins did not reduce the amount of soluble M protein below the amount required for assembly of the O23R1 virus. Instead, the most pronounced defect in ts M proteins was in the ability of membrane-derived M proteins to be solubilized in the presence of the detergent Triton X-100. It is proposed that this detergent-insoluble form of M protein interferes with a step necessary to initiate assembly of NCM complexes. A similar detergent, Triton X-114, caused aggregation of membrane-derived wild-type M protein, disproving an earlier proposal that membrane-derived M protein behaves like an integral membrane protein in the presence of Triton X-114. Aggregation of wild-type M protein in the presence of Triton X-100 could be induced by incubation at 37 degrees C with a high-molecular-weight fraction isolated from uninfected cells by sucrose gradient centrifugation. These results implicate host components in inducing M protein aggregation.
HighlightsMultiple excipients were screened for their ability to stabilize influenza vaccine.Identified a liquid formulation with storage stability for one year at 2–8 °C.A stable liquid formulation may lead to wider use of influenza vaccination.
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