When infecting host cells, influenza virus must move on microfilaments (MFs) at the cell periphery and then move along microtubules (MTs) through the cytosol to reach the perinuclear region for genome release. But how viruses switch from the actin roadway to the microtubule highway remains obscure. To settle this issue, we systematically dissected the role of related motor proteins in the transport of influenza virus between cytoskeletal filaments in situ and in real-time using quantum dot (QD)-based single-virus tracking (SVT) and multicolor imaging. We found that the switch between MF- and MT-based retrograde motor proteins, myosin VI (myoVI) and dynein, was responsible for the seamless transport of viruses from MFs to MTs during their infection. After virus entry by endocytosis, both the two types of motor proteins are attached to virus-carrying vesicles. MyoVI drives the viruses on MFs with dynein on the virus-carrying vesicle hitchhiking. After role exchanges at actin-microtubule intersections, dynein drives the virus along MTs toward the perinuclear region with myoVI remaining on the vesicle moving together. Such a "driver switchover" mechanism has answered the long-pending question of how viruses switch from MFs to MTs for their infection. It will also facilitate in-depth understanding of endocytosis.
Understanding
the microtubule-dependent behaviors of viruses in
live cells is very meaningful for revealing the mechanisms of virus
infection and endocytosis. Herein, we used a quantum dots-based single-particle
tracking technique to dynamically and globally visualize the microtubule-dependent
transport behaviors of influenza virus in live cells. We found that
the intersection configuration of microtubules can interfere with
the transport behaviors of the virus in live cells, which lead to
the changing and long-time pausing of the transport behavior of viruses.
Our results revealed that most of the viruses moved along straight
microtubules rapidly and unidirectionally from the cell periphery
to the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) near the bottom of the
cell, and the viruses were confined in the grid of microtubules near
the top of the cell and at the MTOC near the bottom of the cell. These
results provided deep insights into the influence of entire microtubule
geometry on the virus infection.
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