analysis of the subunit stoichiometries in viral entry亚基的分析化学计量学在病毒进入.pdf
文本预览下载声明
Analysis of the Subunit Stoichiometries in Viral Entry
¤
Carsten Magnus* , Roland R. Regoes
Integrative Biology, The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract
Virions of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infect cells by first attaching with their surface spikes to the CD4
receptor on target cells. This leads to conformational changes in the viral spikes, enabling the virus to engage a coreceptor,
commonly CCR5 or CXCR4, and consecutively to insert the fusion peptide into the cellular membrane. Finally, the viral and
the cellular membranes fuse. The HIV spike is a trimer consisting of three identical heterodimers composed of the gp120
and gp41 envelope proteins. Each of the gp120 proteins in the trimer is capable of attaching to the CD4 receptor and the
coreceptor, and each of the three gp41 units harbors a fusion domain. It is still under debate how many of the envelope
subunits within a given trimer have to bind to the CD4 receptors and to the coreceptors, and how many gp41 protein
fusion domains are required for fusion. These numbers are referred to as subunit stoichiometries. We present a
mathematical framework for estimating these parameters individually by analyzing infectivity assays with pseudotyped
viruses. We find that the number of spikes that are engaged in mediating cell entry and the distribution of the spike number
play important roles for the estimation of the subunit stoichiometries. Our model framework also shows why it is important
to subdivide the question of the number of functional subunits within one trimer into the three different subunit
stoichiometries. In a second step, we extend our models to study whether the subunits within one trimer cooperate during
receptor bindin
显示全部