Transient changes of the conformation of hemagglutinin of influenza virus at low pH detected by time-resolved circular dichroism spectroscopy

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Abstract

Membrane fusion of influenza virus is mediated by a conformational change of the viral membrane protein hemagglutinin (HA) triggered by low pH. By near UV CD spectroscopy, which is sensitive to the arrangement and mobility of aromatic amino acids in proteins, we have monitored continuously with a time resolution of 5 s the kinetics of structural alterations of the ectodomain of HA isolated from different influenza virus strains (H1 (A/PR 8/34), H2 (A/Japan), and H3 (X31)). To establish a functional correlation to structural alterations of the HA ectodomain reflected by the CD, we have measured the kinetics of the virus-erythrocyte fusion and of the inactivation of fusion by low pH preincubation of viruses. At acidic pH we found a multiphasic behavior of the CD signal recorded at 283 nm. Upon lowering the pH we detected first an increase of the CD amplitude, which is associated with the formation of a fusion-competent state of HA. The initial increase was followed by a continuous decline of CD amplitude, which can be ascribed to a transformation into a fusion-inactivated conformation that is in its early phase reversible as found for A/Japan. The half-time of the different phases of the CD signal depended on the virus strain, the temperature and the acidic pH. The results support recent hypotheses that the fusion-competent conformation is an intermediate of the fusion-inactivated structure of HA.

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Korte, T., Ludwig, K., Krumbiegel, M., Zirwer, D., Damaschun, G., & Herrmann, A. (1997). Transient changes of the conformation of hemagglutinin of influenza virus at low pH detected by time-resolved circular dichroism spectroscopy. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(15), 9764–9770. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.15.9764

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