Literature detail

Unraveling a three-step spatiotemporal mechanism of triggering of receptor-induced Nipah virus fusion and cell entry.

Qian Liu1 Jacquelyn A Stone Birgit Bradel-Tretheway Jeffrey Dabundo Javier A Benavides Montano Jennifer Santos-Montanez Scott B Biering Anthony V Nicola Ronald M Iorio Xiaonan Lu Hector C Aguilar
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, United States of America.
PMID 24278018 2013 PLoS Pathog eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Membrane fusion is essential for entry of the biomedically-important paramyxoviruses into their host cells (viral-cell fusion), and for syncytia formation (cell-cell fusion), often induced by paramyxoviral infections [e.g. those of the deadly Nipah virus (NiV)]. For most paramyxoviruses, membrane fusion requires two viral glycoproteins. Upon receptor binding, the attachment glycoprotein (HN/H/G) triggers the fusion glycoprotein (F) to undergo conformational changes that merge viral and/or cell membranes. However, a significant knowledge gap remains on how HN/H/G couples cell receptor binding to F-triggering. Via interdisciplinary approaches we report the first comprehensive mechanism of NiV membrane fusion triggering, involving three spatiotemporally sequential cell receptor-induced conformational steps in NiV-G: two in the head and one in the stalk. Interestingly, a headless NiV-G mutant was able to trigger NiV-F, and the two head conformational steps were required for the exposure of the stalk domain. Moreover, the headless NiV-G prematurely triggered NiV-F on virions, indicating that the NiV-G head prevents premature triggering of NiV-F on virions by concealing a F-triggering stalk domain until the correct time and place: receptor-binding. Based on these and recent paramyxovirus findings, we present a comprehensive and fundamentally conserved mechanistic model of paramyxovirus membrane fusion triggering and cell entry.

Virus Internalization Animals CHO Cells Cricetinae Cricetulus Glycoproteins Henipavirus Infections Membrane Fusion Proteins Nipah Virus Receptors, Virus Viral Proteins

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

Receptor binding induces three sequential conformational changes in Nipah virus G glycoprotein that trigger the fusion protein and enable viral entry.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Via interdisciplinary approaches we report the first comprehensive mechanism of NiV membrane fusion triggering, involving three spatiotemporally sequential cell receptor-induced conformational steps in NiV-G: two in the head and one in the stalk.

Receptors
cell receptor