A viral fusogen hijacks the actin cytoskeleton to drive cell-cell fusion [article]

Ka Man Carmen Chan, Sungmin Son, Eva M Schmid, Daniel A Fletcher
2019 bioRxiv   pre-print
Cell-cell fusion, which is essential for tissue development and used by some viruses to form pathological syncytia, is typically driven by fusogenic membrane proteins with tall (>10 nm) ectodomains that undergo conformational changes to bring apposing membranes in close contact prior to fusion. Here we report that a viral fusogen with a short (<2 nm) ectodomain, the reptilian orthoreovirus p14, accomplishes the same task by hijacking the actin cytoskeleton. We show that the cytoplasmic domain
more » ... p14 triggers N-WASP-mediated assembly of a branched actin network, directly coupling local force generation with a short membrane-disruptive ectodomain. This work reveals that overcoming energetic barriers to cell-cell fusion does not require conformational changes of tall fusogens but can instead be driven by harnessing the host cytoskeleton.
doi:10.1101/761502 fatcat:4vcva6yrbzgalmpjghtvlccp74