AbstractThe data of Melikyan et al. (J. Gen. Physiol. 106:783, 1995) for the time required for the first measurable step of fusion, the formation of the first flickering conductivity pore between influenza hemagglutinin (HA) expressing cells and planar bilayers, has been analyzed using a new mass action kinetic model. The analysis incorporates a rigorous distinction between the minimum number of HA trimers aggregated at the nascent fusion site (which is denoted the minimal aggregate size) and the number of those trimers that must to undergo a slow essential conformational change before the first fusion pore could form (which is denoted the minimal fusion unit). At least eight (and likely more) HA trimers aggregated at the nascent fusion sit...
Membrane fusion is an essential step during entry of enveloped viruses into cells. Conventional fusi...
AbstractTwo subunits of influenza hemagglutinin (HA), HA1 and HA2, represent one of the best-charact...
Enveloped viruses, such as influenza, infect cells by fusing their viral envelope with the cell memb...
AbstractThe data of Melikyan et al. (J. Gen. Physiol. 106:783, 1995) for the time required for the f...
AbstractThe data of Danieli et al. (J. Cell Biol. 133:559–569, 1996) and Blumenthal et al. (J. Cell ...
AbstractThe mechanism of influenza hemagglutinin (HA) mediated membrane fusion has been intensively ...
AbstractInfluenza enters the host cell cytoplasm by fusing the viral and host membrane together. Fus...
AbstractThe data for the pH dependence of lipid mixing between influenza virus (A/PR/8/34 strain) an...
AbstractA molecular model of the low-pH-induced membrane fusion by influenza hemagglutinin (HA) is p...
for fusion between hemagglutinin (HA)-expressing cells and fluorescently labeled erythrocytes has be...
AbstractCells expressing wild-type influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) or HA with a point mutation wi...
Fusion of viral and host membranes is a key step during infection by membrane-enclosed viruses. The ...
Recently, it has become clear that the influenza virus fusion protein, hemagglutinin (HA), produces ...
AbstractThe recent finding that more than one Influenza hemagglutinin (HA) is required at the fusion...
AbstractWhile biological membrane fusion is classically defined as the leak-free merger of membranes...
Membrane fusion is an essential step during entry of enveloped viruses into cells. Conventional fusi...
AbstractTwo subunits of influenza hemagglutinin (HA), HA1 and HA2, represent one of the best-charact...
Enveloped viruses, such as influenza, infect cells by fusing their viral envelope with the cell memb...
AbstractThe data of Melikyan et al. (J. Gen. Physiol. 106:783, 1995) for the time required for the f...
AbstractThe data of Danieli et al. (J. Cell Biol. 133:559–569, 1996) and Blumenthal et al. (J. Cell ...
AbstractThe mechanism of influenza hemagglutinin (HA) mediated membrane fusion has been intensively ...
AbstractInfluenza enters the host cell cytoplasm by fusing the viral and host membrane together. Fus...
AbstractThe data for the pH dependence of lipid mixing between influenza virus (A/PR/8/34 strain) an...
AbstractA molecular model of the low-pH-induced membrane fusion by influenza hemagglutinin (HA) is p...
for fusion between hemagglutinin (HA)-expressing cells and fluorescently labeled erythrocytes has be...
AbstractCells expressing wild-type influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) or HA with a point mutation wi...
Fusion of viral and host membranes is a key step during infection by membrane-enclosed viruses. The ...
Recently, it has become clear that the influenza virus fusion protein, hemagglutinin (HA), produces ...
AbstractThe recent finding that more than one Influenza hemagglutinin (HA) is required at the fusion...
AbstractWhile biological membrane fusion is classically defined as the leak-free merger of membranes...
Membrane fusion is an essential step during entry of enveloped viruses into cells. Conventional fusi...
AbstractTwo subunits of influenza hemagglutinin (HA), HA1 and HA2, represent one of the best-charact...
Enveloped viruses, such as influenza, infect cells by fusing their viral envelope with the cell memb...