| Literature DB >> 23304142 |
Yoshinao Kubo1, Hideki Hayashi, Toshifumi Matsuyama, Hironori Sato, Naoki Yamamoto.
Abstract
Retroviruses include infectious agents inducing severe diseases in humans and animals. In addition, retroviruses are widely used as tools to transfer genes of interest to target cells. Understanding the entry mechanism of retroviruses contributes to developments of novel therapeutic approaches against retrovirus-induced diseases and efficient exploitation of retroviral vectors. Entry of enveloped viruses into host cell cytoplasm is achieved by fusion between the viral envelope and host cell membranes at either the cell surface or intracellular vesicles. Many animal retroviruses enter host cells through endosomes and require endosome acidification. Ecotropic murine leukemia virus entry requires cathepsin proteases activated by the endosome acidification. CD4-dependent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is thought to occur via endosomes, but endosome acidification is not necessary for the entry whereas entry of CD4-independent HIVs, which are thought to be prototypes of CD4-dependent viruses, is low pH dependent. There are several controversial results on the retroviral entry pathways. Because endocytosis and endosome acidification are complicatedly controlled by cellular mechanisms, the retrovirus entry pathways may be different in different cell lines.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23304142 PMCID: PMC3523128 DOI: 10.1155/2012/640894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Virol ISSN: 1687-8639
Figure 1Conformational change of retroviral TM subunit for membrane fusion.
Inhibitors used in studies of retroviral entry pathway.
| Inhibitors | Target |
|---|---|
| Ammonium chloride | Acidification of intracellular vesicles |
| Bafilomycin A-l | Acidification of intracellular vesicles |
| Concanamycin A | Acidification of intracellular vesicles |
| Dynasore | Dynamin-dependent endocytosis |
| Chlorpromazine | Clathrin-dependent endocytosis |
| CA-074Me | Cathepsin B protease |
| Dynamin DN mutant1 | Dynamin-dependent endocytosis |
| Caveolin DN mutant | Caveolin-dependent endocytosis |
| Clathrin DN mutant | Clathrin-dependent endocytosis |
| Eps 15 DN mutant | Endocytosis |
1DN: dominant negative.
Differential dependence of HIV and MLV infections on endosome acidification.
| Viruses | Dependence of acidification | Cell lines | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ecotropic MLV | Independent | Rat XC | [ |
| Dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human TE671 | [ | |
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| Amphotropic MLV | Independent | Mouse NIH3T3, rat XC | [ |
| Dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human TE671 | [ | |
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| Polytropic MLV | Independent | Rat XC | [ |
| Dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human RE671, rat XC | [ | |
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| Xenotropic MLV | Independent | Human HT1080, HTX, porcine, rat XC | [ |
| Dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human RE671 | [ | |
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| CD4-dependent HIV | Independent | Human CEM, HeLa, C8166, VB | [ |
| Independent | Human 293T, HeLa, TE671 | [ | |
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| CD4-independent HIV | Dependent | Human 293T, HeLa, TE671 | [ |
Differential internalization pathways of HIV and MLV infections.
| Viruses | Internalization pathway | Cell lines | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ecotropic MLV | Dynamin dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human TE671, rat XC | [ |
| Dynamin-, clathrin independent | Human HeLa | [ | |
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| Amphotropic MLV | Dynamin dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human TE671, rat XC | [ |
| Caveolin dependent | Mouse NIH3T3 | [ | |
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| Polytropic MLV | Dynamin dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human TE671, rat XC | [ |
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| Xenotropic MLV | Dynamin dependent | Mouse NIH3T3, human TE671, rat XC | [ |
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| CD4-dependent HIV | Dynamin dependent | Human HeLa | [ |
| Clathrin dependent | Human primary T lymphocyte | [ | |
| Dynamin-, Eps15 dependent | Human HeLa | [ | |
| Dynamin-, Eps15 independent | Human 293T, HeLa, TE671 | [ | |
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| CD4-independent HIV | Dynamin-, Eps15 dependent | Human 293T, HeLa, TE671 | [ |
Figure 2Entry pathway of ecotropic MLV in almost all susceptible cells. Blue area indicates acidic condition.
Figure 3Entry pathway of ecotropic MLV in XC cells. Ecotropic MLV entry in XC cells may occur in acidic late endosomes, but endosome acidification is not required for the entry.
Figure 4Entry pathway of CD4-dependent HIV. Blue area indicates acidic condition.
Figure 5Entry pathway of CD4-independent HIV. Blue area indicates acidic condition.
Figure 6Entry pathways of Ebola virus and Ebola virus-pseudotyped retrovirus vector. Blue area indicates acidic condition.
Figure 7Retrovirus particles are internalized into intracellular vesicles by various pathways, and vesicle acidification is necessary for the infections.