Sorting of an apical plasma membrane glycoprotein occurs before it reaches the cell surface in cultured epithelial cells (original) (raw)

The large external domain is sufficient for the correct sorting of secreted or chimeric influenza virus hemagglutinins in polarized monkey kidney cells

Journal of Cell Biology, 1987

MA104.11 rhesus kidney cells express several characteristics of polarized epithelial cells, including the formation of "domes" on impermeable substrates, the establishment of a transmonolayer electrical resistance when grown on collagen gels, the polarized maturation of influenza and vesicular stomatitis viruses, and the expression of the glycoproteins of those viruses at a single surface domain. The polarized expression of the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) is maintained in MA104.11 cells infected with SV40-derived vectors carrying a cDNA gene for either the wild-type influenza virus HA, a truncated HA gene encoding a secreted form of HA (HA~c), or a chimeric gene encoding a hybrid protein with the external domain of the HA and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (HAG). Thus, the recognition event separating glycoproteins, such as HA, destined for the apical surface from proteins, such as G, destined for the basolateral membranes involves features of the external domains of the proteins. The transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of HA have no role in this process.

Intracellular transport of influenza virus hemagglutinin to the apical surface of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells

Journal of Cell Biology, 1984

The intracellular pathway followed by the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) to the apical surface of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells was studied by radioimmunoassay, immunofluorescence, and immunoelectron microscopy. To synchronize the migration, we used a temperature-sensitive mutant of influenza WSN, ts61, which, at the nonpermissive temperature, 39.5 degrees C, exhibits a defect in the HA that prevents its exit from the endoplasmic reticulum. Upon transfer to permissive temperature, 32 degrees C, the HA appeared in the Golgi apparatus after 10 min, and on the apical surface after 30-40 min. In the presence of cycloheximide, the expression was not inhibited, indicating that the ts defect is reversible; a wave of HA migrated to the cell surface, where it accumulated with a half time of 60 min. After passage through the Golgi apparatus the HA was detected in a population of smooth vesicles, about twice the size of coated vesicles, located in the apical half of the cytoplasm. These ...

The MAL Proteolipid Is Necessary for Normal Apical Transport and Accurate Sorting of the Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin in Madin-Darby Canine Kidney Cells

Journal of Cell Biology, 1999

The MAL (MAL/VIP17) proteolipid is a nonglycosylated integral membrane protein expressed in a restricted pattern of cell types, including T lymphocytes, myelin-forming cells, and polarized epithelial cells. Transport of the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) to the apical surface of epithelial Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells appears to be mediated by a pathway involving glycolipid-and cholesterolenriched membranes (GEMs). In MDCK cells, MAL has been proposed previously as being an element of the protein machinery for the GEM-dependent apical transport pathway. Using an antisense oligonucleotidebased strategy and a newly generated monoclonal antibody to canine MAL, herein we have approached the effect of MAL depletion on HA transport in MDCK cells. We have found that MAL depletion diminishes the presence of HA in GEMs, reduces the rate of HA transport to the cell surface, inhibits the delivery of HA to the apical surface, and produces partial missorting of HA to the basolateral membrane. These effects were corrected by ectopic expression of MAL in MDCK cells whose endogenous MAL protein was depleted.

Nonpolarized secretion of truncated forms of the influenza hemagglutinin and the vesicular stomatitus virus G protein from MDCK cells

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1987

The demonstration that the envelope glycoproteins G of vesicular stomatitus virus and hemagglutinin of influenza virus synthesized in polarized epithelial cells transfected with the corresponding genes are effectively segregated to the basolateral or apical plasma membrane domains, respectively, implies that the information determining this segregation resides within the structures of the proteins themselves. To localize the sorting information within these proteins, the polarity of secretion of truncated hemagglutinin and G glycoproteins secreted from confluent monolayers of MDCK cells transformed with vectors containing the corresponding truncated cDNAs was examined. It was found that, even though the transformed cells continued to secrete a major endogenous glycoprotein exclusively from the apical surface, the modified viral glycoproteins were secreted in a nonpolarized fashion from both sides of the monolayers. These observations suggest that important information for the sorting of the viral glycoprotein is contained within their membrane anchoring or cytoplasmic segments or that, if sorting signals are luminally located, these signals must be present in a conformation that is not attainable when the polypeptides are not attached to the membrane.

Hemagglutinin of Influenza Virus Partitions into the Nonraft Domain of Model Membranes

Biophysical Journal, 2010

The HA of influenza virus is a paradigm for a transmembrane protein thought to be associated with membranerafts, liquid-ordered like nanodomains of the plasma membrane enriched in cholesterol, glycosphingolipids, and saturated phospholipids. Due to their submicron size in cells, rafts can not be visualized directly and raft-association of HA was hitherto analyzed by indirect methods. In this study, we have used GUVs and GPMVs, showing liquid disordered and liquid ordered domains, to directly visualize partition of HA by fluorescence microscopy. We show that HA is exclusively (GUVs) or predominantly (GPMVs) present in the liquid disordered domain, regardless of whether authentic HA or domains containing its raft targeting signals were reconstituted into model membranes. The preferential partition of HA into ld domains and the difference between lo partition in GUV and GPMV are discussed with respect to differences in packaging of lipids in membranes of model systems and living cells suggesting that physical properties of lipid domains in biological membranes are tightly regulated by protein-lipid interactions.

The Glycosylation of the Influenza A Virus Hemagglutinin by Mammalian Cells

Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1997

We have characterized the glycans at individual sites on the hemagglutinin of three influenza A variants to obtain information on the role of cell-specific glycosylation in determining the receptor binding properties of this virus. The variants differ in whether they have a glycosylation site at residue 129 on the tip of the hemagglutinin and whether amino acid 184 (near to the receptor binding site) is His or Asn. We found that all sites on each variant are glycosylated in Madin-Darby bovine kidney cells, that the glycosylation is site-specific, and that the glycans at the same site in each variant are highly similar. One site that is buried in the hemagglutinin trimer contains only oligomannose glycans. The remaining sites carry complex glycans of increasing size as the distance of the site from the viral membrane decreases. Most of these complex glycans are terminated with ␣-galactose residues, a consequence in bovine cells of the removal of terminal sialic acids by the viral neuraminidase. Although the glycans at residue 129 are among the smallest on the molecule, they are large enough to reach the receptor binding pocket on their own and adjacent monomers. The results suggest that the reduction in receptor binding observed with Madin-Darby bovine kidney cell-grown virus is due to the combined effect of large complex glycans at the tip of the hemagglutinin and a His to Asn substitution close to the receptor binding pocket.

Influenza Hemagglutinin and Neuraminidase Membrane Glycoproteins

Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2010

Considerable progress has been made toward understanding the structural basis of the interaction of the two major surface glycoproteins of influenza A virus with their common ligand/ substrate: carbohydrate chains terminating in sialic acid. The specificity of virus attachment to target cells is mediated by hemagglutinin, which acquires characteristic changes in its receptor-binding site to switch its host from avian species to humans. Anti-influenza drugs mimic the natural sialic acid substrate of the virus neuraminidase enzyme but utilize the much tighter binding of the drugs for efficacy. Resistance to one of the two main antiviral drugs is differentially acquired by the two distinct subsets of neuraminidase as a consequence of structural differences in the enzyme active site between the two phylogenetic groups. * This is the first article in the Thematic Minireview Series on Influenza Virus.

Glycosylation requirements for intracellular transport and function of the hemagglutinin of influenza virus

Journal of Virology, 1992

The contribution of each of the seven asparagine-linked oligosaccharide side chains on the hemagglutinin of the A/Aichi/68 (X31) strain of influenza virus was assessed with respect to its effect on the folding, intracellular transport, and biological activities of the molecule. Twenty mutant influenza virus hemagglutinins were constructed and expressed, each of which had one or more of the seven glycosylation sites removed. Investigations of these mutant hemagglutinins indicated that (i) no individual oligosaccharide side chain is necessary or sufficient for the folding, intracellular transport, or function of the molecule, (ii) at least five oligosaccharide side chains are required for the X31 hemagglutinin molecule to move along the exocytic pathway to the plasma membrane, and (iii) mutant hemagglutinins having less than five oligosaccharide side chains form intracellular aggregates and are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum.