Transcript
Page 1: Anusara Daenthanasanmak ZIB 15.11.2010

Anusara Daenthanasanmak

ZIB 15.11.2010

Jason Mercer and Ari Helenius

Nature Cell Biology volume 11May 2009

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1. Endocytosis

2. Macropinocytosis

3. Cellular factors and signalling pathways

4. Viruses that internalized via macropinosomes

5. Perspectives

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• Nature of the cargo

• Cellular factors

• Signal needed for activation

• The fate of internalised material

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• Actin dependent endocytosis

• Internalization of fluid and membrane

• Plasma membrane ruffling

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• Inhomogenous in size and irregular in shape

• Diameter of 0.5-10 µm

• Increase cellular fluid 5-10 fold

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• Role of particle

• Fluid uptake

• Cargo specificity

• Cell-type specificity

• Cellular machinery

• Global versus membrane activation

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• A family of hydrolase enzymes that can bind and hydrolyze guanosine triphosphate (GTP)

• Small GTPases regulate a wide variety of processes in the cell, including growth, cellular differentiation, cell movement and lipid vesicle transport

• Ras Superfamily GTPase play a crucial role

• Ras superfamily is divided into eight main families Ras, Rad, Rab, Rap, Ran, Rho, Rheb, Rit, and Arf

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• Na+/H+ exchangers

• The inhibitors are sometimes used as the diagnostic test to identify Macropinocytosis

• Depletion of cholesterol blocks both membrane ruffling and macropinocytosis

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• Macropinosomes are sensitive to cytoplasmic pH

• In human carcinoma A431 cells, most macropinosome recycle back to the cell surface

• Trafficking seems to depend on cell type and mode of induction

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• Type of endocytosis used is determined by particle, size, choice of receptor, cell tropism and mode of transmission

• Viruses are valuable tools for the study of endocytic mechanisms

• Viruses can make use of Macropinocytosis; directly or indirectly

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1. Ruffling

2. Fluid uptake

3. Actin

4. Rho GTPases

5. Na/H exchangers

6. Kinases – inhibitors of Pak1, PI(3)K and PKC kinases block entry

7. Other factors – dynamin-2, myosin II, microtubules and Arf6

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• Poxvirus family, replicate in cytosol

• Large, enveloped, double stranded DNA virus

• Mature Vaccinia virions mimic the uptake of apoptotic bodies and enter cells using macropinocytosis

• The uptake causes a rapid, transient increase of fluid phase markers

• Inhibitor analysis shows that Pak1, PKC and PI(3)K are also needed

• Na/H exchangers, myosin II and cholesterol are required

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d. Focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM): virions internalized next to retracting blebs

C. Vaccinia virus mature virions induces systemic blebbing in HeLa cells

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• Non-enveloped, double stranded DNA viruses

• Human adenovirus serotype 3 (Ad3) is associated with epidemic conjunctivitis, fatal respiratory and systemic disease

• Its entry into epithelial and haematopoietic cells by direct macropinocytosis by binding to CD46 activates Rac1

• Ad3 induces clustering of αv-integrins triggering several cellular responses including activation of PI(3)K

• The virus activates Pak1 and CtBP1 for closure of Ad3-macropinosome

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• Picornaviridae family

• Small, non enveloped RNA virus

• Causing meningoencephalitis, carditis and mild respiratory or enteric disease

• EV1 bind α2β1-integrins and co-internalised into vacuolar that accumulate fluid-phase markers

• Infection is dependent on actin dynamics and Rac1

• It also requires cholesterol, Pak1, PI(3)K, PLC and Na/H exchanger

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• Picornavirus

• CVB can cause myocarditis and hepatitis

• Enter epithelia at tight junctions by stimulating the internalization of junctional membrane and virus itself into macropinosome

• Internalized virions colocalize with fluid phase makers and the Rab5 effector

• CVB entry requires the activity of Ras, Rab5 and Rab34 GTPase, Na/H exchangers and PKC

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• Large enveloped double stranded DNA virus

• Cause mucosal blisters to deadly brain infections

• HSV1 shows cell type dependent entry mechanisms

• Macropinocytosis occurs in epidermal keratinocytes, HeLa and CHO cells

• EM shows HSV1 virions to be in large, uncoated vesicles during the early stage of internalization

•Inhibition of PI(3)K or RTKs prevent virus entry and infection

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• Enveloped, single stranded RNA lentivirus

• HIV-1 are internalized by cell type-specific entry mechanisms

• Marechal et al. (2001) showed direct Macropinocytosis in human macrophages and Brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMVECs) (Liu et al, 2002)

• EM of HIV-1 infected BMVECs showed internalization into large cytoplasmic vacuoles with fluid phase makers

• Macropinocytosis of HIV-1 into BMVECs is not a productive infection route, but rather for cell-to- cell transmission

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HIV-1 virions enter large uncoated intracellular vacuoles into Macrophages (Marechal et al. J.virol 2001)

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• Associate with respiratory infections

• Ad2/5 binds to its receptor induces the integrin clustering needed for internalization

•Ad2/5-induced macropinosomes are lysed and their contents released into the cytosol, required for escaping and infection

• Ad2/5 triggered macropinocytosis depends on integrins, PKC, actin dynamics, Rac1, Na/H exchange and cholesterol, independent of dynamin

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• Small, enveloped single-stranded RNA

• Cause rash and fever

• EM showed RV within clathrin-coated pits and vesicles and particles also colocalized with clathrin-mediated makers

• RV enters cells by clathrin-mediated endocytosis, however, inhibition of Na/H exchange, actin or microtubule polymerization inhibits macropinocytosis

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• Are there several different types of macropinocytosis?

• How many different viruses are using these pathways?

• How do they trigger the relevant responses in different host cell types?

• Why a virus might use macropinocytosis for immune evasion?

• Macropinocytosis of apoptotic debris is known to suppress activation of innate immune responses

• Ruffling and increased motility, in vivo infection, may allow viruses to spread more efficiently through epithelial layers, basal lamina and other obstacles

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