Literature detail

Headless Henipaviral Receptor Binding Glycoproteins Reveal Fusion Modulation by the Head/Stalk Interface and Post-receptor Binding Contributions of the Head Domain.

Yao Yu Yeo1 David W Buchholz1 Amandine Gamble2 Mason Jager1 Hector C Aguilar1
Affiliations 2 institutions
  1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell Universitygrid.5386.8, Ithaca, New York, USA.
  2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.
PMID 34288734 2021 J Virol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Cedar virus (CedV) is a nonpathogenic member of the <i>Henipavirus</i> (HNV) genus of emerging viruses, which includes the deadly Nipah (NiV) and Hendra (HeV) viruses. CedV forms syncytia, a hallmark of henipaviral and paramyxoviral infections and pathogenicity. However, the intrinsic fusogenic capacity of CedV relative to NiV or HeV remains unquantified. HNV entry is mediated by concerted interactions between the attachment (G) and fusion (F) glycoproteins. Upon receptor binding by the HNV G head domain, a fusion-activating G stalk region is exposed and triggers F to undergo a conformational cascade that leads to viral entry or cell-cell fusion. Here, we demonstrate quantitatively that CedV is inherently significantly less fusogenic than NiV at equivalent G and F cell surface expression levels. We then generated and tested six headless CedV G mutants of distinct C-terminal stalk lengths, surprisingly revealing highly hyperfusogenic cell-cell fusion phenotypes 3- to 4-fold greater than wild-type CedV levels. Additionally, similarly to NiV, a headless HeV G mutant yielded a less pronounced hyperfusogenic phenotype compared to wild-type HeV. Further, coimmunoprecipitation and cell-cell fusion assays revealed heterotypic NiV/CedV functional G/F bidentate interactions, as well as evidence of HNV G head domain involvement beyond receptor binding or G stalk exposure. All evidence points to the G head/stalk junction being key to modulating HNV fusogenicity, supporting the notion that head domains play several distinct and central roles in modulating stalk domain fusion promotion. Further, this study exemplifies how CedV may help elucidate important mechanistic underpinnings of HNV entry and pathogenicity. <b>IMPORTANCE</b> The <i>Henipavirus</i> genus in the <i>Paramyxoviridae</i> family includes the zoonotic Nipah (NiV) and Hendra (HeV) viruses. NiV and HeV infections often cause fatal encephalitis and pneumonia, but no vaccines or therapeutics are currently approved for human use. Upon viral entry, <i>Henipavirus</i> infections yield the formation of multinucleated cells (syncytia). Viral entry and cell-cell fusion are mediated by the attachment (G) and fusion (F) glycoproteins. Cedar virus (CedV), a nonpathogenic henipavirus, may be a useful tool to gain knowledge on henipaviral pathogenicity. Here, using homotypic and heterotypic full-length and headless CedV, NiV, and HeV G/F combinations, we discovered that CedV G/F are significantly less fusogenic than NiV or HeV G/F, and that the G head/stalk junction is key to modulating cell-cell fusion, refining the mechanism of henipaviral membrane fusion events. Our study exemplifies how CedV may be a useful tool to elucidate broader mechanistic understanding for the important henipaviruses.

attachment protein Cedar virus head Hendra henipavirus Nipah paramyxovirus receptor binding protein stalk syncytia Giant Cells Glycoproteins HEK293 Cells Henipavirus Henipavirus Infections Humans Membrane Fusion Receptors, Virus

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Henipavirus G glycoprotein head domains mediate receptor binding and regulate fusion activation, showing that interactions at the head/stalk junction modulate receptor-dependent viral entry for Cedar, Nipah, and Hendra viruses.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Upon receptor binding by the HNV G head domain, a fusion-activating G stalk region is exposed and triggers F to undergo a conformational cascade that leads to viral entry or cell-cell fusion. Further, coimmunoprecipitation and cell-cell fusion assays revealed heterotypic NiV/CedV functional G/F interactions as well as evidence of HNV G head domain involvement beyond receptor binding or G stalk exposure.

Method
coimmunoprecipitation assay; cell-cell fusion assay
Receptors
receptor binding by the HNV G head domain