Literature detail

Triggering of the newcastle disease virus fusion protein by a chimeric attachment protein that binds to Nipah virus receptors.

Anne M Mirza1 Hector C Aguilar Qiyun Zhu Paul J Mahon Paul A Rota Benhur Lee Ronald M Iorio
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Department of Microbiology and Physiological Systems, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01655, USA.
PMID 21460213 2011 J Biol Chem eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

The fusion (F) proteins of Newcastle disease virus (NDV) and Nipah virus (NiV) are both triggered by binding to receptors, mediated in both viruses by a second protein, the attachment protein. However, the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) attachment protein of NDV recognizes sialic acid receptors, whereas the NiV G attachment protein recognizes ephrinB2/B3 as receptors. Chimeric proteins composed of domains from the two attachment proteins have been evaluated for fusion-promoting activity with each F protein. Chimeras having NiV G-derived globular domains and NDV HN-derived stalks, transmembranes, and cytoplasmic tails are efficiently expressed, bind ephrinB2, and trigger NDV F to promote fusion in Vero cells. Thus, the NDV F protein can be triggered by binding to the NiV receptor, indicating that an aspect of the triggering cascade induced by the binding of HN to sialic acid is conserved in the binding of NiV G to ephrinB2. However, the fusion cascade for triggering NiV F by the G protein and that of triggering NDV F by the chimeras can be distinguished by differential exposure of a receptor-induced conformational epitope. The enhanced exposure of this epitope marks the triggering of NiV F by NiV G but not the triggering of NDV F by the chimeras. Thus, the triggering cascade for NiV G-F fusion may be more complex than that of NDV HN and F. This is consistent with the finding that reciprocal chimeras having NDV HN-derived heads and NiV G-derived stalks, transmembranes, and tails do not trigger either F protein for fusion, despite efficient cell surface expression and receptor binding.

Animals Chlorocebus aethiops Ephrin-B2 Guinea Pigs Newcastle disease virus Nipah Virus Protein Binding Recombinant Fusion Proteins Vero Cells Viral Envelope Proteins

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Chimeric Nipah virus and Newcastle disease virus attachment proteins triggered NDV fusion in Vero cells through binding to the NiV receptor ephrinB2, demonstrating cross-receptor functional compatibility in cell culture.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Chimeras having NiV G-derived globular domains and NDV HN-derived stalks, transmembranes, and cytoplasmic tails are efficiently expressed, bind ephrinB2, and trigger NDV F to promote fusion in Vero cells.

Method
cell fusion assay; receptor binding assay; chimeric protein experiment
Experimental system
in vitro cell culture
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Chimeric attachment proteins containing NiV G receptor-binding domains enabled NDV fusion protein activation via the NiV receptor ephrinB2, showing molecular adaptation of NDV F triggering to a heterologous receptor system.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Chimeras having NiV G-derived globular domains and NDV HN-derived stalks, transmembranes, and cytoplasmic tails are efficiently expressed, bind ephrinB2, and trigger NDV F to promote fusion in Vero cells. Thus, the NDV F protein can be triggered by binding to the NiV receptor, indicating that an aspect of the triggering cascade induced by the binding of HN to sialic acid is conserved in the binding of NiV G to ephrinB2.

Genes or proteins
F; HN; G
Receptors
ephrinB2; sialic acid receptor
Mechanism types
receptor_binding; cell_entry; fusion_triggering; tropism_adaptation
1 records
Extraction confidence 1.00
Key finding

A chimeric Newcastle disease virus attachment protein containing Nipah virus G domains binds ephrinB2 and triggers NDV fusion, indicating that NDV fusion can be initiated via the Nipah virus receptor.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Chimeras having NiV G-derived globular domains and NDV HN-derived stalks, transmembranes, and cytoplasmic tails are efficiently expressed, bind ephrinB2, and trigger NDV F to promote fusion in Vero cells.

Receptors
ephrinB2