Abstract

Fusion of cells mediated by HVJ was inhibited completely with 5 μg/ml or more of cytochalasin D (CD). With cytochalasin, HVJ-cell interaction at 0 °C proceeded as well as without cytochalasin; HVJ was adsorbed to cell surfaces and the cells agglutinated together. Then the virus particles were enfolded with cell membranes, which resulted in the disappearance of hemadsorption activity on the cell surfaces. When the cell-virus complex was incubated at 37 °C, the early reactions proceeded as well as without cytochalasin; the hemadsorption activity reappeared on the cell surfaces, the viral envelopes fused with cell membranes at the same degree as without cytochalasin, and a stage sensitive to sodium azide appeared as in a control without cytochalasin. But cell-to-cell fusion did not occur in the presence of cytochalasin; cells were dissociated freely from the cell aggregates during incubation. This indicates that cell-to-cell fusion was inhibited but HVJ envelope to cell membrane interactions proceeded well on incubation at 37 °C. These findings suggest that viral envelope-cell membrane fusion and cell-cell fusion are separable, and participation of a cytoskeleton system including microfilaments in the cells is essential for cell-cell fusion.

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