Literature detail

Identification of Hendra virus G glycoprotein residues that are critical for receptor binding.

Kimberly A Bishop1 Tzanko S Stantchev Andrew C Hickey Dimple Khetawat Katharine N Bossart Valery Krasnoperov Parkash Gill Yan Ru Feng Lemin Wang Bryan T Eaton Lin-Fa Wang Christopher C Broder
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA.
PMID 17376907 2007 J Virol eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Hendra virus (HeV) is an emerging paramyxovirus capable of infecting and causing disease in a variety of mammalian species, including humans. The virus infects its host cells through the coordinated functions of its fusion (F) and attachment (G) glycoproteins, the latter of which is responsible for binding the virus receptors ephrinB2 and ephrinB3. In order to identify the receptor binding site, a panel of G glycoprotein constructs containing mutations was generated using an alanine-scanning mutagenesis strategy. Based on a predicted G structure, charged amino acids residing in regions that could be homologous to those in the measles virus H attachment glycoprotein known to be involved in its protein receptor interaction were targeted. Using a coprecipitation-based assay, seven single-amino-acid substitutions in HeV G were identified as having significantly impaired binding to both the ephrinB2 and ephrinB3 viral receptors: D257A, D260A, G439A, K443A, G449A, K465A, and D468A. The impairment of receptor interaction conferred a concomitant diminution in their abilities to promote membrane fusion when coexpressed with F. The G glycoprotein mutants were also recognized by three or more conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies of a panel of five, were expressed on the cell surface, and retained their abilities to bind and coprecipitate F. Interestingly, some of these mutant G glycoproteins coprecipitated with F more efficiently than wild-type G. Taken together, these data provide strong biochemical and functional evidence that some of these residues could be part of a conformation-dependent, discontinuous, and overlapping ephrinB2 and -B3 binding domain within the HeV G glycoprotein.

Amino Acid Substitution Amino Acids Binding Sites Cell Line Ephrin-B2 Ephrin-B3 HeLa Cells Hendra Virus Humans Predictive Value of Tests Protein Binding Protein Conformation Receptors, Virus Viral Envelope Proteins attachment protein G

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 1.00
Key finding

Hendra virus G glycoprotein binds to ephrinB2 and ephrinB3 receptors, and specific amino acid substitutions in G impair receptor binding and reduce membrane fusion activity.

Virus
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The virus infects its host cells through the coordinated functions of its fusion (F) and attachment (G) glycoproteins, the latter of which is responsible for binding the virus receptors ephrinB2 and ephrinB3. Using a coprecipitation-based assay, seven single-amino-acid substitutions in HeV G were identified as having significantly impaired binding to both the ephrinB2 and ephrinB3 viral receptors.

Method
alanine-scanning mutagenesis; coprecipitation-based assay
Receptors
ephrinB2
Extraction confidence 1.00
Key finding

Mutations in Hendra virus G glycoprotein reduce its ability to bind to the ephrinB3 receptor, identifying residues important for interaction and viral entry.

Virus
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Using a coprecipitation-based assay, seven single-amino-acid substitutions in HeV G were identified as having significantly impaired binding to both the ephrinB2 and ephrinB3 viral receptors.

Method
alanine-scanning mutagenesis; coprecipitation-based assay
Receptors
ephrinB3
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Mutations D257A, D260A, G439A, K443A, G449A, K465A, and D468A in the Hendra virus G glycoprotein reduce binding to ephrinB2 and ephrinB3 receptors, indicating residues critical for receptor interaction.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Seven single-amino-acid substitutions in HeV G were identified as having significantly impaired binding to both the ephrinB2 and ephrinB3 viral receptors: D257A, D260A, G439A, K443A, G449A, K465A, and D468A.

Genes or proteins
G glycoprotein; F glycoprotein
Receptors
ephrinB2; ephrinB3
Mutations
D257A; D260A; G439A; K443A; G449A; K465A; D468A
Mechanism types
receptor_binding; cell_entry