6533b831fe1ef96bd1299149

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Multi-virion infectious units arise from free viral particles in an enveloped virus

Rafael SanjuánMaria Duran-morenoJosé M. Cuevas

subject

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)viruses030106 microbiologyImmunologyVirus AttachmentCentrifugationPhosphatidylserinesPlasma protein bindingBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyArticle03 medical and health sciencesViral Envelope ProteinsViral envelopeGeneticsLipid bilayerDifferential centrifugationchemistry.chemical_classificationViral matrix proteinVirionRNA virusVesiculovirusCell BiologyFlow Cytometrybiology.organism_classificationVirologyDynamic Light Scattering3. Good healthMicroscopy Electron030104 developmental biologychemistryVesicular stomatitis virusGlycoproteinProtein Binding

description

Many animal viruses are enveloped in a lipid bilayer uptaken from cellular membranes. Since viral surface proteins bind to these membranes to initiate infection, we hypothesized that free virions may also be capable of interacting with the envelopes of other virions extracellularly. Here, we demonstrate this hypothesis in the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a prototypic negative-strand RNA virus composed by an internal ribonucleocapsid, a matrix protein, and an external envelope1. Using microscopy, dynamic light scattering, differential centrifugation, and flow cytometry, we show that free viral particles can spontaneously aggregate into multi-virion infectious units. We also show that, following the establishment of these contacts, different viral genetic variants are co-transmitted to the same target cell. Furthermore, virion-virion binding can determine key aspects of viral fitness such as antibody escape. In purified virions, this process is driven by protein-lipid interactions probably involving the VSV surface glycoprotein and phosphatidylserine. Whereas we found that multi-virion complexes occurred unfrequently in standard cell cultures, they were abundant in other fluids such as saliva, a natural VSV shedding route2. Our findings contrast with the commonly accepted perception of virions as passive propagules, and show the ability of enveloped viruses to establish collective infectious units, which could in turn facilitate the evolution of virus-virus interactions and of social-like traits3.

10.1038/nmicrobiol.2017.78http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nmicrobiol.2017.78