Intrinsic membrane association of the cytoplasmic tail of influenza virus M2 protein and lateral membrane sorting regulated by cholesterol binding and palmitoylation.

Biochem J

Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Institute of Immunology and Molecular Biology, Free University Berlin, Philippstrasse 13, 10115 Berlin, Germany.

Published: August 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The influenza virus M2 protein acts as a proton channel and is crucial for virus particle release from the cell membrane.
  • The cytoplasmic tail (CT) of M2 has an amphiphilic helix that interacts with the lipid bilayer, influencing membrane curvature and targeting the protein to viral-budding sites.
  • The study found that cholesterol binding and palmitoylation of this CT affect how M2 interacts with membranes, with mutations in specific amino acids hindering these processes and showing different effects on M2's placement in cellular structures.

Article Abstract

The influenza virus transmembrane protein M2 is a proton channel, but also plays a role in the scission of nascent virus particles from the plasma membrane. An amphiphilic helix in the CT (cytoplasmic tail) of M2 is supposed to insert into the lipid bilayer, thereby inducing curvature. Palmitoylation of the helix and binding to cholesterol via putative CRAC (cholesterol recognition/interaction amino acid consensus) motifs are believed to target M2 to the edge of rafts, the viral-budding site. In the present study, we tested pre-conditions of this model, i.e. that the CT interacts with membranes, and that acylation and cholesterol binding affect targeting of M2. M2-CT, purified as a glutathione transferase fusion protein, associated with [3H]photocholesterol and with liposomes. Mutation of tyrosine residues in the CRAC motifs prevented [(3)H]photocholesterol labelling and reduced liposome binding. M2-CT fused to the yellow fluorescent protein localized to the Golgi in transfected cells; membrane targeting was dependent on CRAC and (to a lesser extent) on palmitoylation. Preparation of giant plasma membrane vesicles from cells expressing full-length M2-GFP (green fluorescent protein) showed that the protein is partly present in the raft domain. Raft targeting required palmitoylation, but not the CRAC motifs. Thus palmitoylation and cholesterol binding differentially affect the intrinsic membrane binding of the amphiphilic helix.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BJ20110706DOI Listing

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