Roles of Cholesterol in Early and Late Steps of the Nipah Virus Membrane Fusion Cascade

Cholesterol has been implicated in various viral life cycle steps for different enveloped viruses, including viral entry into host cells, cell-cell fusion, and viral budding from infected cells. Enveloped viruses acquire their membranes from their host cells. Although cholesterol has been associated...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of virology Vol. 95; no. 6
Main Authors: Contreras, Erik M, Johnston, Gunner P, Buchholz, David W, Ortega, Victoria, Monreal, I Abrrey, Zamora, J Lizbeth R, Cheung, Tracy, Aguilar, Hector C
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Society for Microbiology 24-02-2021
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Cholesterol has been implicated in various viral life cycle steps for different enveloped viruses, including viral entry into host cells, cell-cell fusion, and viral budding from infected cells. Enveloped viruses acquire their membranes from their host cells. Although cholesterol has been associated with the binding and entry of various enveloped viruses into cells, cholesterol's exact function in the viral-cell membrane fusion process remains largely elusive, particularly for the paramyxoviruses. Furthermore, paramyxoviral fusion occurs at the host cell membrane and is essential for both virus entry (virus-cell fusion) and syncytium formation (cell-cell fusion), central to viral pathogenicity. Nipah virus (NiV) is a deadly member of the family, which also includes Hendra, measles, mumps, human parainfluenza, and various veterinary viruses. The zoonotic NiV causes severe encephalitis, vasculopathy, and respiratory symptoms, leading to a high mortality rate in humans. We used NiV as a model to study the role of membrane cholesterol in paramyxoviral membrane fusion. We used a combination of methyl-beta cyclodextrin (MβCD), lovastatin, and cholesterol to deplete or enrich cell membrane cholesterol outside cytotoxic concentrations. We found that the levels of cellular membrane cholesterol directly correlated with the levels of cell-cell fusion induced. These phenotypes were paralleled using NiV/vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)-pseudotyped viral infection assays. Remarkably, our mechanistic studies revealed that cholesterol reduces an early F-triggering step but enhances a late fusion pore formation step in the NiV membrane fusion cascade. Thus, our results expand our mechanistic understanding of the paramyxoviral/henipaviral entry and cell-cell fusion processes. Cholesterol has been implicated in various steps of the viral life cycle for different enveloped viruses. Nipah virus (NiV) is a highly pathogenic enveloped virus in the genus within the family, capable of causing a high mortality rate in humans and high morbidity in domestic and agriculturally important animals. The role of cholesterol for NiV or the henipaviruses is unknown. Here, we show that the levels of cholesterol influence the levels of NiV-induced cell-cell membrane fusion during syncytium formation and virus-cell membrane fusion during viral entry. Furthermore, the specific role of cholesterol in membrane fusion is not well defined for the paramyxoviruses. We show that the levels of cholesterol affect an early F-triggering step and a late fusion pore formation step during the membrane fusion cascade. Thus, our results expand our mechanistic understanding of the viral entry and cell-cell fusion processes, which may aid the development of antivirals.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
Gunner P. Johnston and David W. Buchholz contributed equally to the manuscript.
Citation Contreras EM, Johnston GP, Buchholz DW, Ortega V, Monreal IA, Zamora JLR, Cheung T, Aguilar HC. 2021. Roles of cholesterol in early and late steps of the Nipah virus membrane fusion cascade. J Virol 95:e02323-20. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.02323-20.
ISSN:0022-538X
1098-5514
DOI:10.1128/JVI.02323-20