viral membrane proteins

VIRAL MEMBRANE PROTEINS

National Science Centre UMO-2018/30/E/NZ1/00257


keywords: membrane fusion, virus-like particle, peptide-lipid interaction

Enveloped viruses, such as e.g. influenza, are among the most significant human pathogens of the respiratory tract. Their entry into cells requires the viral envelope to fuse with the target host cell membrane. In influenza, this process is mediated by hemagglutinin which is a glycosylated trimeric transmembrane protein. Its fragment, termed as a fusion peptide (FP), inserts into the target membrane, meanwhile its C-terminal transmembrane domain (TMD) remains anchored in the viral envelope. Prior to FP exposition and insertion into the cell membrane, hemagglutinin is proteolytically cleaved and, as a response to external triggers such as pH drop, it encounters a conformational change. This extended intermediate further undergoes a number of structural rearrangements to pull the cell membrane and the viral lipid envelope closer. During this event, both FP and TMD, destabilize and dehydrate the two lipid bilayers, leading to sequential merger of the outer and inner leaflets.

Our current project focuses on molecular mechanisms of protein-induced membrane fusion. In particular, we analyze the role of cholesterol redistribution induced by the FP and the role of plausible FP:TMD interactions in contributing to membrane fusion. In our research we use synthesized peptides and artificial model membranes as well as virus-like particles (VLP) obtained from either overexpression in mammalian cells or from genetically engineered plants.Â