Abstract

The formation of infectious influenza virions is sensitive to the cholesterol levels in the host cell. The findings that the influenza viral envelope is enriched with cholesterol and sphingolipids and cholesterol depletion alters the clustering of influenza virus proteins in the plasma membrane, which is detrimental to virus assembly, suggests that the influenza virus assembles and bud from cholesterol‐ and sphingolipid‐enriched domains in the plasma membrane. Although this hypothesis has been around for decades, whether the region of the plasma membrane from which the influenza virus buds is enriched with cholesterol and sphingolipids is still unknown. To answer this question, we have used high‐resolution secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) to image the distributions of stable isotope‐labeled cholesterol and immunolabeled influenza virus protein in the plasma membrane during virus budding with ~100 nm lateral resolution. This work involved metabolically incorporating distinct stable isotopes into the cholesterol and lipids of interest in living MDCK cells. After infecting these MDCK cells with influenza virus for 24 h, we immunolabeled the influenza envelope protein, hemagglutinin. Then we imaged the isotope‐labeled cholesterol, lipids, and immunolabeled influenza hemagglutinin on the surfaces of the virus infected cells with ~100 nm lateral resolution. The resulting images clearly show that the influenza virus does bud from cholesterol‐enriched domains in the membranes of MDCK cells.Support or Funding InformationThis research was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation under CHE 15‐08662.

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