Journal article

Real-time visualization of perforin nanopore assembly

C Leung, AW Hodel, AJ Brennan, N Lukoyanova, S Tran, CM House, SC Kondos, JC Whisstock, MA Dunstone, JA Trapani, I Voskoboinik, HR Saibil, BW Hoogenboom

Nature Nanotechnology | NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2017

Abstract

Perforin is a key protein of the vertebrate immune system. Secreted by cytotoxic lymphocytes as soluble monomers, perforin can self-assemble into oligomeric pores of 10-20 nm inner diameter in the membranes of virus-infected and cancerous cells. These large pores facilitate the entry of pro-apoptotic granzymes, thereby rapidly killing the target cell. To elucidate the pathways of perforin pore assembly, we carried out real-time atomic force microscopy and electron microscopy studies. Our experiments reveal that the pore assembly proceeds via a membrane-bound prepore intermediate state, typically consisting of up to approximately eight loosely but irreversibly assembled monomeric subunits. Th..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by UK Research and Innovation


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the BBSRC (BB/J005932/1, BB/J006254/1 and BB/N015487/1), the ERC (advanced grant no. 294408), the Wellcome Trust (no. 079605/2/06/02), NHMRC Fellowship (1059126), Project (1062706) and Program (1013667) grants, and the Sackler Foundation. The authors thank N. Nand Gosvami and J. Pegman for assistance with early experiments and analysis, and R. Thorogate, A. Ciccone and S. Verschoor for technical support.