Lecture 18: Intracellular transport Flint et al., Chapter 12.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cells and Tissues.
Advertisements

Lesson 3: Translation.
Intracellular Compartments and Protein Sorting Haixu Tang School of Informatics.
Intracellular Transport1 Chapter 15 You should review functions of different organelles We already discussed evolution; review Focus will be on: 1) mechanisms.
Protein Sorting & Transport Paths of Protein Trafficking Nuclear Protein Transport Mitochondrial & Chloroplast Transport Experimental Systems Overview.
Intracellular Compartments and Protein Sorting
Unit 7 Endomembranes. SECRETORY PATHWAY: Unit 7 Secretory Pathway Proteins are synthesized on the Rough ER. Move via vesicles to Golgi Move via vesicles.
Javad Jamshidi Fasa University of Medical Sciences Proteins Into membranes and Organelles and Vesicular Traffic Moving.
Cell Structure and Function Chapter 3 Basic Characteristics of Cells Smallest living subdivision of the human body Diverse in structure and function.
THE REPLICATION OF VIRUSES Virology Lecture 2 Three lectures dealing with (1) replication of DNA viruses (2) the culture, growth and recognition of virus.
Cell Structure and Function
PROTEIN TRAFFICKING AND LOCALIZATION PROTEINS SYNTHESIZED IN CYTOPLASM, BUT BECOME LOCALIZED IN CYTOPLASM CYTOPLASMIC MEMBRANE PERIPLASM OUTER MEMBRANE.
Virus Intracellular Movement LECTURE 11: Viro100: Virology 3 Credit hours NUST Centre of Virology & Immunology Waqas Nasir Chaudhry.
Protein Sorting ISAT 351, Spring 2004 College of Integrated Science and Technology James Madison University.
Review For Final I. Should I take the final? Can’t hurt you Calculate your average and determine what you need to change your grade.
Protein Structure and Function
Cytoplasmic Membrane Systems II Lecture 12. How Do Proteins Get Imported Into Membrane Enclosed Organelles? Import Requires Input of Energy to Occur!
Topic 41 4.Structure/Function of the Organelles - Synthesis.
Chemical reactions in cells need to be isolated. Enzymes work in complexes, spatial distribution in cytosol, nucleus Confinement of reactions in organelle.
Lecture 6 - Intracellular compartments and transport I.
Lecture 7 - Intracellular compartments and transport II
Lecture 6 Intracellular Compartments and Protein Sorting.
Inside the Cell 7.1 What’s Inside the Cell? Prokaryotic Cells Eukaryotic Cells –The Nucleus –Ribosomes –Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum –Golgi Apparatus –Smooth.
Virus Assembly.
Lecture 2: Protein sorting (endoplasmic reticulum) Dr. Mamoun Ahram Faculty of Medicine Second year, Second semester, Principles of Genetics.
Chapter 25 Protein trafficking Introduction 25.2 Oligosaccharides are added to proteins in the ER and Golgi 25.3 The Golgi stacks are polarized.
Cells and Tissues.
Cells and Tissues Carry out all chemical activities needed to sustain life Cells are the building blocks of all living things Tissues are groups of cells.
Summary 1.Rough ER and smooth ER; 2.Signal hypothesis, translocation into ER; 3.Single-span and multi-span membrane proteins; 4.Glycosylation; 5.Protein.
CHAPTER 6 SYSTEMS BIOLOGY OF CELL ORGANIZATION
PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by Patty Bostwick-Taylor, Florence-Darlington Technical College Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing.
Chapter 3 Membrane targeting of proteins By D. Thomas Rutkowski & Vishwanath R. Lingappa.
Cells.
Protein targeting to organelles 1.From the birth place to the destination— general principles 1)The problem: One place to make protein but many destinations—how.
Cellular compartmentalization Pages Q1 Name at least two of the three protein complexes involved in the electron transport chain?
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry 2. ER- protein modifications
© 2003 By Default!Slide 1 Protein Sorting, Transport and modification part1 M. Saifur Rohman, MD, PhD, FIHA.
MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION Copyright 2008 © W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 13 Moving Proteins into Membranes.
Introduction to Cell Structure and Function 08/2007 Lecture By Dr. Dirk M. Lang Dept. of Human Biology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town.
Cells Review and Cell Organelles. Review: Two Types of Cells Prokaryotic cells –Have no nucleus –No membrane bound organelles –Evolved 3.5 billion years.
Lecture for Chapter 4 DNA organization Endomembrane System.
Endomembrane System Yasir Waheed NUST Center of Virology & Immunolgy National University of Sciences &Technology.
Cellular Uptake Major ways that cells acquire large samples from environment Phagocytosis-”cell-eating” or engulfment  Amoebae or macrophages  Cell produces.
Centrioles Pairs of microtubular structures Play a role in cell division.
BIO201A Cell Biology Lecture 29 Wednesday 04/04/07.
Basic Unit of Life Cell Song. Principles of Cell Theory 1. Cells are basic units of life 2. Biogenesis - All Cells arise from other cells 3. Energy flow.
Roles of ER Rough Ribosomes synthesize excreted proteins  Stored in cisternae or vesicle Modify proteins  Glycosylation of proteins Delivery of membrane.
Maturation and Release Maturation proceeds differently for naked, enveloped, and complex viruses. Naked icosahedral viruses - Preassembled capsomers are.
Ch. 3 Cell Organization. Cells and Tissues Carry out all chemical activities needed to sustain life Cells are the building blocks of all living things.
Chapter 12 Intracellular Compartments and Protein Sorting.
Copyright (c) by W. H. Freeman and Company 17.3 The rough ER is an extensive interconnected series of flattened sacs Figure
Cells Anatomy. Cells and Tissues Carry out all chemical activities Cells are the building blocks of all living things Tissues are groups of cells that.
Vesicular Trafficking Movement From the ER Through the Golgi.
Ch. 3 Cell Organization. Cells and Tissues Carry out all ___________________ needed to sustain life Cells are the _______________ of all living things.
Viruses A “borrowed life”. Characteristics of Life All living things exhibit the following four characteristics: 1.Carry out metabolic activities to meet.
Cytoplasmic membranes-1 Unit objective: To understand that materials in cell are shuttled from one part to another via an extensive membrane network.
Lecture 12: The secretory pathway
Protein targeting or Protein sorting Refer Page 1068 to 1074 Principles of Biochemistry by Lehninger & Page 663 Baltimore Mol Cell Biology.
4.4 Eukaryotic cells are partitioned into functional compartments  Membranes within a eukaryotic cell partition the cell into compartments, areas where.
The ER and Golgi Modify & Sort Proteins
 Smallest unit of all living things  Composed of organelles  Each organelle performs specific jobs so the cell can do it’s job.
Endomembrane system and vesicular transport
Protein Synthesis and Sorting: A Molecular View
Intracellular Vesicular Traffic
The Endomembrane system
Intracellular Vesicular Traffic
Protein Synthesis and Transport within the Cell
structure & function of eukaryotic organelle
Packaged Genes – “Ready for Delivery”
Chapter 7 Inside the Cell Biological Science, Third Edition
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 18: Intracellular transport Flint et al., Chapter 12.

General remarks Viruses are cellular parasites Eukaryotic cells are functionally compartmentalized  Viral components must be synthesized in different intracellular compartments To assemble mature virions, virus components must be brought together for assembly from the different compartments. Intracellular trafficking/sorting of viral nucleic acids, proteins, and glycoproteins is an essential prelude to virus particle assembly.

Cellular compartments: considerations Nucleus Cyotoplasm Plasma membrane Internal membranes Mitochondria and other organelles Viruses have evolved to assemble wherever a compartment exists

Virus assembly within the nucleus Most DNA viruses assemble at the site of genome replication, the nucleus. Viral structural proteins enter vial normal cellular pathway of nuclear protein transport

Interactions with internal cellular membranes Envelopes of many viruses are derived from internal membranes Majority assemble at the cytoplasmic faces of compartments of the secretory pathway Bottom line: where there’s a membrane, there’s a place for enveloped viruses to assemble Fig

Virus assembly at the plasma membrane Enveloped viruses generally assembled at the plasma membrane. Integral membrane proteins are first transported to plasma membrane Internal proteins and nucleic acid genomes must also be actively transported to site of assembly (Fig. 12.2)

Intracellular trafficking: Considerations Relative sizes of viruses and host cells: –Virus: diameters on the nm scale –Cells: diameters on the  m scale Cell vol – 10 4 x greater than virus. Viral components can’t find one another by passive diffusion. Therefore, viral components must be actively transported to assembly sites.

Getting from point A to point B. Directional movement requires energy. Directional movement is generally achieved by: –Protein channels (transporters, translocons, pores, portals) Move molecules across membranes –Plasma –Nuclear –ER –Golgi –Mitochondria –Motor proteins/cytoskeletal tracks Directional movement within the cytoplasm –Myosin motors move cargo on actin fibers –Dynein and kinesin motors move cargo on microtubules (Box 12.1)

Vesicular transport to the cell surface Viral membrane proteins travel to the cell surface through a series of membrane-bound compartments and vesicles. ER to Golgi to plasma membrane. Trafficking requires cellular and viral proteins (Fig. 12.9)

Transport of viral membrane proteins to the plasma membrane They hitch rides on the cellular secretory pathway: ER  cis Goli network  Golgi cisternae  trans Golgi network  plasma membrane Maturation of proteins and structures occurs sequentially in different components. Oligomerization occurs in ER and cis Golgi network Oligosaccharides are trimmed, and further modified in Golgi cisternae Proteins can be cleaved and further modified in trans Golgi network Transported from trans Golgi to plasma membrane.

Snare proteins: ensuring targeting specificity Snare proteins bring membranes close together v-Snare: vesicular Snare t-Snare: target Snare. v- and t-Snares are highly specific for one another Come together, bring vesicle and target membranes in close proximity to one another Exclusion of water lowers energy barrier to membrane fusion Upon fusion, contents of vesicle emptied into target area (Fig )

Translocation of viral membrane proteins into the ER Integral membrane proteins first inserted into ER membrane –Ribosomes targeted to ER by Signal Recognition Protein (SRP) –SRP interacts with ER bound SRP receptor –Directs ribosome to Translocation channel –Hydrophobic signal peptide associates with translocation channel –Remainder of protein translocated into ER lumen –Signal peptides cleaved off by signal peptidase Hydrophobic Stop Signals used to stop translocation of protein into ER lumen (Box 12.2) –Results in transmembrane proteins

Translocation of viral membrane proteins into the ER (Fig. 12.6)

Hydrophobic Stop Signals used to stop translocation of protein into ER lumen Results in transmembrane proteins (Box 12.2)

Reactions within the ER lumen Proteins can be modified within the ER lumen. Glycosylation (modification with sugars) Disulfide bond formation (between Cys residues) Protein refolding by molecular chaperones Oligomerization – most viral membrane proteins are complexed with one another

Reactions within the Golgi apparatus (Fig )

Proteolytic cleavages occur in Golgi e.g. retroviral TM (transmembrane) and SU (surface unit) subunits of Env Fig

Maturation of Influenza HA0 protein during transit through the secretory pathway Fig. 12.4

Viral genome transport Viral genomes must also be transported to sites of virus particle assembly Sequence specific viral proteins interact with viral genomes These interact with the cellular transport systems to ensure delivery of genomes to the proper compartment

Viral inhibition/alteration of intracellular transport It is often in the interest of the virus to inhibit components of the transport machinery Many viruses inhibit transport of MHC class I molecules: prevents cell from signaling to the immune system that it is infected.

Viral inhibition/alteration of intracellular transport Some viruses inhibit transport beyond the compartment where they assemble. e.g. Poliovirus assembles in the ER. Poliovirus 2BC and 3A proteins inhibit vesicular transport beyond the ER. Force accumulation of virus components in the compartment where they assemble. Fig

Some viruses redirect transport system to decrease expression of their target proteins on the plasma membrane. e.g. HIV Nef and Vpu redirect CD4 away from plasma membrane. This helps to ensure that new virus won’t fuse back into infected cell. Viral inhibition/alteration of intracellular transport