Literature detail

Molecular Mechanism for LAMP1 Recognition by Lassa Virus.

Hadas Cohen-Dvashi1 Nadav Cohen1 Hadar Israeli1 Ron Diskin2
Affiliations 2 institutions
  1. Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel.
  2. Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel [email protected].
PMID 25972533 2015 J Virol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Lassa virus is a notorious human pathogen that infects many thousands of people each year in West Africa, causing severe viral hemorrhagic fevers and significant mortality. The surface glycoprotein of Lassa virus mediates receptor recognition through its GP1 subunit. Here we report the crystal structure of GP1 from Lassa virus, which is the first representative GP1 structure for Old World arenaviruses. We identify a unique triad of histidines that forms a binding site for LAMP1, a known lysosomal protein recently discovered to be a critical receptor for internalized Lassa virus at acidic pH. We demonstrate that mutation of this histidine triad, which is highly conserved among Old World arenaviruses, impairs LAMP1 recognition. Our biochemical and structural data further suggest that GP1 from Lassa virus may undergo irreversible conformational changes that could serve as an immunological decoy mechanism. Together with a variable region that we identify on the surface of GP1, those could be two distinct mechanisms that Lassa virus utilizes to avoid antibody-based immune response. Structural data at atomic resolution for viral proteins is key for understanding their function at the molecular level and can facilitate novel avenues for combating viral infections. Here we used X-ray protein crystallography to decipher the crystal structure of the receptor-binding domain (GP1) from Lassa virus. This is a pathogenic virus that causes significant illness and mortality in West Africa. This structure reveals the overall architecture of GP1 domains from the group of viruses known as the Old World arenaviruses. Using this structural information, we elucidated the mechanisms for pH switch and binding of Lassa virus to LAMP1, a recently identified host receptor that is critical for successful infection. Lastly, our structural analysis suggests two novel immune evasion mechanisms that Lassa virus may utilize to escape antibody-based immune response.

Amino Acid Sequence Cell Line Humans Lassa Fever Lassa virus Lysosomal Membrane Proteins Lysosomal-Associated Membrane Protein 1 Models, Molecular Molecular Sequence Data Protein Binding Receptors, Virus Sequence Alignment Viral Envelope Proteins LAMP1 protein, human

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Lassa virus GP1 contains a conserved histidine triad critical for binding the LAMP1 receptor, and mutations impair this interaction, revealing pH‑dependent receptor recognition and possible immune‑evasion adaptation.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We identify a unique triad of histidines that forms a binding site for LAMP1, a known lysosomal protein recently discovered to be a critical receptor for internalized Lassa virus at acidic pH. We demonstrate that mutation of this histidine triad, which is highly conserved among Old World arenaviruses, impairs LAMP1 recognition. Our biochemical and structural data further suggest that GP1 from Lassa virus may undergo irreversible conformational changes that could serve as an immunological decoy mechanism.

Genes or proteins
GP1
Receptors
LAMP1
Mutations
histidine triad mutations
Mechanism types
receptor_binding; immune_escape; cell_entry
1 records
Extraction confidence 1.00
Key finding

Lassa virus GP1 binds the lysosomal receptor LAMP1 via a histidine triad that mediates receptor recognition at acidic pH.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We identify a unique triad of histidines that forms a binding site for LAMP1, a known lysosomal protein recently discovered to be a critical receptor for internalized Lassa virus at acidic pH.

Method
X-ray protein crystallography; structural analysis; biochemical assay
Receptors
LAMP1