AI Article Synopsis

  • Beta-propiolactone (BPL) effectively inactivates the H3N2 influenza virus, with complete loss of cell infectivity observed at concentrations of 1mM and above.
  • BPL treatment reduces the virus's ability to fuse with lipid membranes, which is crucial for infection, indicating that higher BPL concentrations inhibit this fusion activity in a dose-dependent manner.
  • Mass spectrometry analysis revealed modifications to viral proteins HA2 and M1, suggesting that BPL affects their function, but partial fusion activity can be restored by monensin, while amantadine does not influence membrane fusion in BPL-treated viruses.

Article Abstract

Beta-propiolactone (BPL) is commonly used as an inactivating reagent to produce viral vaccines. Although BPL has been described to chemically modify nucleic acids, its effect on viral proteins, potentially affecting viral infectivity, remains poorly studied. Here, a H3N2 strain of influenza virus was submitted to treatment with various BPL concentrations (2-1000μM). Cell infectivity was progressively reduced and entirely abolished at 1mM BPL. Virus fusion with endosome being a critical step in virus infection, we analyzed its ability to fuse with lipid membrane after BPL treatment. By monitoring calcein leakage from liposomes fusing with the virus, we measured a decrease of membrane fusion in a BPL dose-dependent manner that correlates with the loss of infectivity. These data were complemented with cryo transmission electron microscopy (cryoTEM) and cryo electron tomography (cryoET) studies of native and modified viruses. In addition, a decrease of leakage irrespective of BPL concentration was measured suggesting that the insertion of HA2 fusion peptide into the target membrane was inhibited even at low BPL concentrations. Interestingly, mass spectrometry revealed that HA2 and M1 matrix proteins had been modified. Furthermore, fusion activity was partially restored by the protonophore monensin as confirmed by cryoTEM and cryoET. Moreover, exposure to amantadine, an inhibitor of M2 channel, did not alter membrane fusion activity of 1mM BPL treated virus. Taken together these results show that BPL treatment inhibits membrane fusion, likely by altering function of proteins involved in the fusion process, shedding new light on the effect of BPL on influenza virus.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbamem.2013.09.021DOI Listing

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