Literature detail

A system for functional analysis of Ebola virus glycoprotein.

A Takada1 C Robison H Goto A Sanchez K G Murti M A Whitt Y Kawaoka
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Department of Virology and Molecular Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, 332 North Lauderdale, P.O. Box 318, Memphis, TN 38101, USA.
PMID 9405687 1997 Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Ebola virus causes hemorrhagic fever in humans and nonhuman primates, resulting in mortality rates of up to 90%. Studies of this virus have been hampered by its extraordinary pathogenicity, which requires biosafety level 4 containment. To circumvent this problem, we developed a novel complementation system for functional analysis of Ebola virus glycoproteins. It relies on a recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) that contains the green fluorescent protein gene instead of the receptor-binding G protein gene (VSVDeltaG*). Herein we show that Ebola Reston virus glycoprotein (ResGP) is efficiently incorporated into VSV particles. This recombinant VSV with integrated ResGP (VSVDeltaG*-ResGP) infected primate cells more efficiently than any of the other mammalian or avian cells examined, in a manner consistent with the host range tropism of Ebola virus, whereas VSVDeltaG* complemented with VSV G protein (VSVDeltaG*-G) efficiently infected the majority of the cells tested. We also tested the utility of this system for investigating the cellular receptors for Ebola virus. Chemical modification of cells to alter their surface proteins markedly reduced their susceptibility to VSVDeltaG*-ResGP but not to VSVDeltaG*-G. These findings suggest that cell surface glycoproteins with N-linked oligosaccharide chains contribute to the entry of Ebola viruses, presumably acting as a specific receptor and/or cofactor for virus entry. Thus, our VSV system should be useful for investigating the functions of glycoproteins from highly pathogenic viruses or those incapable of being cultured in vitro.

Biological Assay Animals DNA, Recombinant Ebolavirus Glycoproteins Green Fluorescent Proteins Humans Luminescent Proteins Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus Viral Proteins

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

A pseudotyped vesicular stomatitis virus bearing Ebola Reston virus glycoprotein infected primate cells more efficiently than other mammalian or avian cells, reflecting Ebola host tropism.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Ebola Reston virus glycoprotein (ResGP) was efficiently incorporated into VSV particles. This recombinant VSV with integrated ResGP (VSVΔG*-ResGP) infected primate cells more efficiently than any of the other mammalian or avian cells examined, in a manner consistent with the host range tropism of Ebola virus.

Method
cell infection assay; functional complementation system
Experimental system
pseudovirus assay
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Cell surface glycoproteins bearing N-linked oligosaccharide chains mediate Ebola Reston virus glycoprotein–dependent entry, consistent with receptor or cofactor involvement.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Chemical modification of cells to alter their surface proteins markedly reduced their susceptibility to VSVΔG*-ResGP but not to VSVΔG*-G, suggesting that cell surface glycoproteins with N-linked oligosaccharide chains contribute to the entry of Ebola viruses, presumably acting as a specific receptor and/or cofactor for virus entry.

Method
recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus system; cell-entry assay; chemical modification of cell surface proteins
Receptors
cell surface glycoproteins with N-linked oligosaccharide chains