key: cord-0783429-2qxk0kvr authors: Neuman, Benjamin W.; Kiss, Gabriella; Al-Mulla, Hawaa M. N.; Dokland, Terje; Buchmeier, Michael J.; Weikl, Thomas; Schley, David title: Direct Observation of Membrane Insertion by Enveloped Virus Matrix Proteins by Phosphate Displacement date: 2013-02-28 journal: PLoS One DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057916 sha: be464c3787cad446a8be522f9ed4793c16c81b49 doc_id: 783429 cord_uid: 2qxk0kvr Enveloped virus release is driven by poorly understood proteins that are functional analogs of the coat protein assemblies that mediate intracellular vesicle trafficking. We used differential electron density mapping to detect membrane integration by membrane-bending proteins from five virus families. This demonstrates that virus matrix proteins replace an unexpectedly large portion of the lipid content of the inner membrane face, a generalized feature likely to play a role in reshaping cellular membranes. Life as we know it comes wrapped in membranes. These semipermeable barriers are necessary to maintain the electrical and chemical gradients essential to life. In eukaryotes, intracellular vesicle transport is mediated by vesicle transport proteins that are needed to move cargo between organelles and across the plasma membrane [1, 2] . The best studied examples of vesicle-forming proteins appear to initiate membrane curvature by inserting amphipathic protein domains into one side of the membrane, displacing lipid molecules and effectively stretching one membrane face more than the other [3] [4] [5] . While there is considerable evidence for this mechanism, it has proved difficult to directly demonstrate that lipid molecules are displaced when proteins are inserted, as stipulated by the model. Enveloped viruses encode matrix proteins that mold the membrane around new virus particles as they exit a host cell, a process analogous to vesicle transport. Matrix proteins occupy a middle position inside the virus between the membrane and the virus core, are essential for virus assembly, and some direct the release of virus-like particles without help from other viral proteins [6] . However, the matrix-membrane interaction remains poorly understood because of the technical difficulty of directly investigating processes that occur within the membrane. In order to see how working matrix proteins interact with the membrane, we used cryo-electron microscopy to take pictures of virus populations in a near-native environment. In addition to viruses, these populations naturally contained a few empty vesicles and a heterogeneous collection of incompletely assembled viruses that were released from the same cells as the virus. Of these, the most interesting were called GP vesicles, which had virus surface glycoproteins but lacked a visible matrix (GP vesicles; Fig. 1 ). Viruses, GP vesicles and empty vesicles were measured to determine whether the shape of the virus membrane was altered in the presence of matrix proteins. Virus-sized unilamellar vesicles in these micrographs were generally spherical as expected [7] , with an average ratio of 1.0560.10 for the largest to the smallest visible diameter. Three of the eleven viruses studied showed a statistically significant correlation between virus size and shape, ranging from small round viruses to large sausage-shaped particles with maximum diameters up to seven times as long as the shortest diameter ( Fig. 2A) , demonstrating that membrane shape is altered when virus proteins are present. The viruses selected here are all relatively simple, in that matrix proteins and the transmembrane anchors of the surface glycorproteins are the only virus components in direct contact with the membrane. The correlation between size and shape was absent or reduced for GP vesicles (Fig. 2B) , demonstrating that the matrix proteins of these viruses are necessary for membrane bending, as reported previously [8] . We then investigated whether any of these virus matrix proteins could integrate into the membrane and replace lipid molecules, following the mechanism proposed to explain how Sar1p [3] , Epsins [4] and Influenza A virus M2 [5] induce membrane curvature. We looked for differences in the apparent brightness of the membrane in electron micrographs as a way to detect changes in the amount protein in each side of the membrane. This method works on the principle that electrons passing through a sample are scattered approximately in proportion to the square of the atomic number of the constituent atoms [9] . Therefore, when a substance made of small atoms such as protein is integrated into the membrane, membrane lipids are displaced, making that membrane face appear correspondingly dimmer compared to cellderived vesicle controls of similar size in the same image. Matrix proteins from different viruses are believed to use different methods to interact with the membrane. Our dataset included representatives of the three common membrane anchor types, including viruses with transmembrane matrix proteins (Coronaviridae M, Arteriviridae M and GP5), acylated matrix proteins (Retroviridae Gag, Arenaviridae Z) and non-acylated proteins (Orthomyxoviridae M1). The three-dimensional structures of these proteins, where known, appear to be unrelated [10] [11] [12] . We compared transects through the edge of viruses, vesicles and GP vesicles, where the phosphorous atoms of membrane lipids align to give the membrane a double-ringed appearance (Fig. 1 ). Viruses were compared to vesicles using a linear mixed-effects model in order to detect the replacement of membrane phospholipid by lower electron density material such as protein. Similarly, GP vesicles were compared to vesicles to distinguish the effects of matrix proteins from other viral membrane proteins. The intensity of the virus inner phosphate rings differed strongly from internal vesicle controls, with a significantly lower signal in all 11 viruses considered (Fig. 3) . The inner phosphate ring (area marked In) in native virus particles was only 45623% (blue vs. black, n = 11) that of the vesicles and 46631% (red vs. black, n = 5) that of GP vesicles, demonstrating that the reduction in inner leaflet phosphate is matrix protein dependent, and not solely due to transmembrane surface glycoproteins. To our knowledge, this is the first time lipid displacement has been tracked to demonstrate membrane protein integration. We had two main concerns regarding phosphate displacement. The first was mechanical -as the virus gets smaller, the membrane curves more per unit area. Large and small particles differ in curvature per unit length, which could change how many lipid molecules the electron beam encounters at the particle edge, causing large particles to appear brighter than small particles. We tested for this effect by examining the intensity of internal, membrane and external features of 216 Tacaribe virus particles, which ranged from 40 nm to 260 nm in diameter (Fig. 4) . Image intensity did not vary noticeably over the virus size range, demonstrating that curvature does not have a noticeable effect on intensity for virus-sized membranes. Secondly, we considered whether electron interference at the matrix-membrane interface could explain the decreased inner membrane phosphate signal. Contrast in electron microscopy images has two main sources, called amplitude and phase contrast. Amplitude contrast occurs when electrons collide with atoms in the sample and are scattered, and changes with the atomic mass of the sample [13] . Phase contrast is caused by electron interference, and changes with defocus [13] . To examine the effects of phase contrast, TCRV images were grouped according to defocus and analysed as before. Matrix-dependent phosphate displacement was observed across the defocus range (Fig. 5) , though the effect was strongest in images where both phosphate rings were distinctly visible. We concluded that matrix-dependent displacement was not likely caused by electron interference. The presence of transmembrane helixes the virus glycoproteins studied here would be expected to displace less than 10% of the membrane lipid, based on helix diameter, the number of helices per glycoprotein complex and the spacing between complexes. The inner leaflet phosphate displacement by matrix protein was approximately five-fold greater than the displacement of viral glycoproteins. This adds Arenaviridae Z, Orthomyxoviridae M1, Coronaviridae M, Arteriviridae M and GP5 and Retroviridae Gag, to the expanding list of curvature activating proteins that are inserted into one face of the membrane. One effect of protein insertion would be to push lipids aside, temporarily stretching one membrane face to create an inward bulge around the budding virus. The line tension that would be created around the inserted matrix proteins could then be resolved by squeezing the new virus particle outward, a mechanism explored mathematically to explain how vesicular transport proteins work [14] . Other methods that have been used to probe protein-membrane interactions include neutron diffraction [15] and more recently, electron spin resonance [16, 17] . Electron spin resonance can be used to map and understand the kinetics of interactions between specific amino acids and lipid molecules [18] . However, neither provides a convenient way to measure membrane curvature where the protein contacts the membrane, and both analyze the entire sample at once, making it difficult to interpret heterogeneous samples such as native enveloped viruses. Electron spin resonance also requires spin-labeling, which can be difficult to perform without perturbing fragile membrane interactions. Phosphate displacement analysis can be used on native samples, and it provides complementary data on the location and footprint of single protein-membrane interactions from within the visual context of a cryo-electron micrograph. Phosphate displacement analysis is therefore well suited to directly test hypotheses about how membrane interactions are related to protein conformation and membrane curvature [3] [4] [5] 19] , and should be useful for understanding rapidly changing and heterogeneous samples. Phosphate displacement analysis does not require any specialized reagents or instruments beyond access to a standard cryo-electron microscopy suite, and is potentially inexpensive because it can be performed on archival micrographs. The phosphate displacement analysis presented here is a powerful technique that can be used to explore the process of curvature induction and identify new membrane-remodeling proteins. The diversity of these viral and cellular vesicle forming proteins is remarkable, but this extreme example of convergent evolution hints at the wider possibilities for natural and directed membrane manipulation. The prevalence of unifacial membrane integration, which has evolved to work from a wide variety of structural contexts, suggests that these proteins may be useful models for synthetic biology applications that require precise control of the membrane. Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus-Arm53b, Pichinde virus-AN3739 and Tacaribe virus-TRVL11573 was grown on BHK-21 cells; Junin virus-Candid#1 and SARS coronavirus-Tor2 were grown on Vero-E6 cells; Porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus-SD-23983 was grown on MARC145 cells; Type II Feline coronavirus was grown on AK-D cells; Mouse hepatitis virus-A59 was grown on mouse 17Cl-1 cells; Influenza A virus-Udorn/307/72 was grown on MDCK cells; Influenza B virus-Beijing/1/87 was grown in embryonated chicken eggs; and Murine leukaemia virus Gag particles were expressed in SF9 cells using a recombinant baculovirus expression system [20] . Cryo-electron micrographs of Coronaviridae [8] , Arenaviridae [21] , and Arteriviridae [22] , come from published studies. Junin virus, Influenza A virus, Influenza B virus and baculovirus-expressed Murine leukaemia virus Gag particles were purified by density gradient centrifugation and imaged as described previously [8] . Only nearfocus images where the two phosphate rings were distinctly visible were used in this analysis (Fig. 1 ). Vesicles and GP vesicles used in this study were less than two times larger or smaller than their associated virus particles. Micrographs were minimally processed using the ctfit module of EMAN before analysis to correct phase inversion effects [23] . The brightness of entire micrographs was normalized to a common mean value. Data was collected by selecting a rectangular region ,80 Å wide and extending ,100 Å above and below the lowdensity node of the membrane, with dimensions varying slightly depending on image pixel scale. Linear density traces (Fig. 1) were calculated by aligning images and averaging the signal from each ,80 Å image row. Small errors in transect centering were corrected by ten cycles in which density traces were shifted by up to one pixel (3-5 Å ) to find the alignment with the highest linear correlation to the group average for that round. Phosphate peak values were extracted from ,25 Å regions as indicated in Fig. 1 . A total of 27912 density traces were analyzed. For each virus a linear mixed-effects model was fitted by restricted maximum likelihood, assuming that the electron microscope signal intensity was determined by the membrane phosphate peaks (inner or outer) and particle type (virus, GP vesicle, or empty vesicle), including cross-effects. The sample region, particle and micrograph were included as nested random effects. Model fit was deemed acceptable by inspection of Q-Q plots. 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