Literature detail

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Spike Protein Is Not Activated Directly by Cellular Furin during Viral Entry into Target Cells.

Shutoku Matsuyama1 Kazuya Shirato2 Miyuki Kawase2 Yutaka Terada3 Kengo Kawachi3 Shuetsu Fukushi4 Wataru Kamitani3
Affiliations 4 institutions
  1. Department of Virology III, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan [email protected].
  2. Department of Virology III, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan.
  3. Laboratory of Clinical Research on Infectious Diseases, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
  4. Department of Virology I, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan.
PMID 30021905 2018 J Virol eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) utilizes host cellular proteases to enter cells. A previous report shows that furin, which is distributed mainly in the Golgi apparatus and cycled to the cell surface and endosomes, proteolytically activates the MERS-CoV spike (S) protein following receptor binding to mediate fusion between the viral and cellular membranes. In this study, we reexamined furin usage by MERS-CoV using a real-time PCR-based virus cell entry assay after inhibition of cellular proteases. We found that the furin inhibitor dec-RVKR-CMK blocked entry of MERS-CoV harboring an S protein lacking furin cleavage sites; it even blocked entry into furin-deficient LoVo cells. In addition, dec-RVKR-CMK inhibited not only the enzymatic activity of furin but also those of cathepsin L, cathepsin B, trypsin, papain, and TMPRSS2. Furthermore, a virus cell entry assay and a cell-cell fusion assay provided no evidence that the S protein was activated by exogenous furin. Therefore, we conclude that furin does not play a role in entry of MERS-CoV into cells and that the inhibitory effect of dec-RVKR-CMK is specific for TMPRSS2 and cathepsin L rather than furin.<b>IMPORTANCE</b> Previous studies using the furin inhibitor dec-RVKR-CMK suggest that MERS-CoV utilizes a cellular protease, furin, to activate viral glycoproteins during cell entry. However, we found that dec-RVKR-CMK inhibits not only furin but also other proteases. Furthermore, we found no evidence that MERS-CoV uses furin. These findings suggest that previous studies in the virology field based on dec-RVKR-CMK should be reexamined carefully. Here we describe appropriate experiments that can be used to assess the effect of protease inhibitors on virus cell entry.

cathepsin L coronavirus dec-RVKR-CMK furin TMPRSS2 Proteolysis Virus Internalization Amino Acid Chloromethyl Ketones Animals Cathepsin B Cathepsin L Chlorocebus aethiops Furin Humans Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Papain Serine Endopeptidases Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

MERS-CoV spike protein is not activated by furin during entry, but cellular proteases TMPRSS2 and cathepsin L are involved in viral entry.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We found no evidence that MERS-CoV uses furin. The inhibitory effect of dec-RVKR-CMK is specific for TMPRSS2 and cathepsin L rather than furin.

Method
virus cell entry assay; cell-cell fusion assay; protease inhibition assay
Receptors
Spike protein
Host factors
TMPRSS2; cathepsin L; furin