Hsu E C, Sabatinos S, Hoedemaeker F J, Rose D R, Richardson C D
Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, 610 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 2M9, Canada.
Virology. 1999 Jun 5;258(2):314-26. doi: 10.1006/viro.1999.9712.
Researchers at our laboratory have been dissecting the binding domains of the receptor for the Edmonston laboratory strain of measles virus (CD46) through site-specific mutagenesis. We initially substituted most of the hydrophilic amino acids in the two external short consensus regions (SCRI and SCRII) of CD46 with the amino acid alanine [Hsu et al. (1997) J. Virol. 71:6144-6154] and found that the glutamic-arginine residues at positions 58 and 59 were particularly sensitive to change. Here we consider the roles of hydrophobic amino acids in the binding between measles virus H protein and CD46. Hydrophobic amino acids in the SCRI and SCRII domains of CD46 were systematically replaced with serine. The effects of these changes were monitored through the interaction of Sf9 insect cells expressing the H protein and mouse OST-7 cells synthesizing the mutant CD46 molecules. Binding was quantified through a colorimetric assay for beta-galactosidase that was also produced by the insect cells. Our results indicate that E45, Y54, 58E/R59, Y68, F69, Y101, I102, R103, D104, and Y117 seem to be critical residues for the binding of CD46 to measles virus H protein. The hydrophilic amino acid R59 in SCR1 and hydrophobic residues Y101, I102, and Y117 in SCR2 seem to be especially important for interaction between H protein and CD46. In addition, we mapped the antigenic epitopes of five monoclonal antibodies that are known to inhibit the binding between H protein and CD46. Three of these antibodies recognized regions in SCR1, and two reacted with amino acids in SCR2. For the most part, the determinants recognized by the monoclonal antibody corresponded to the amino acids that were most sensitive to change in the binding process. The SCR1 and SCR2 domains of CD46 were modeled from an analogous region in another complement regulatory protein, factor H, whose three-dimensional structure has been previously reported. Amino acids implicated in binding seem to lie on one planar face of the SCR1 and SCR2 domains. These studies serve as a prelude to understanding the structural interactions that occur between CD46 and the measles virus H protein.
我们实验室的研究人员一直通过位点特异性诱变来剖析麻疹病毒埃德蒙斯顿实验室株受体(CD46)的结合结构域。我们最初用丙氨酸取代了CD46两个外部短共识区域(SCRI和SCRII)中的大多数亲水性氨基酸[Hsu等人(1997年),《病毒学杂志》71:6144 - 6154],发现58位和59位的谷氨酸 - 精氨酸残基对变化特别敏感。在此,我们探讨疏水性氨基酸在麻疹病毒H蛋白与CD46结合中的作用。CD46的SCRI和SCRII结构域中的疏水性氨基酸被系统地替换为丝氨酸。通过表达H蛋白的Sf9昆虫细胞与合成突变型CD46分子的小鼠OST - 7细胞之间的相互作用来监测这些变化的影响。通过对昆虫细胞也产生的β - 半乳糖苷酶的比色测定来定量结合。我们的结果表明,E45、Y54、58E/R59、Y68、F69、Y101、I102、R103、D104和Y117似乎是CD46与麻疹病毒H蛋白结合的关键残基。SCR1中的亲水性氨基酸R59以及SCR2中的疏水性残基Y101、I102和Y117似乎对H蛋白与CD46之间的相互作用尤为重要。此外,我们绘制了已知可抑制H蛋白与CD46结合的五种单克隆抗体的抗原表位。其中三种抗体识别SCR1中的区域,两种与SCR2中的氨基酸发生反应。在很大程度上,单克隆抗体识别的决定簇对应于结合过程中对变化最敏感的氨基酸。CD46的SCR1和SCR2结构域是根据另一种补体调节蛋白H因子的类似区域建模的,其三维结构先前已被报道。与结合有关的氨基酸似乎位于SCR1和SCR2结构域的一个平面上。这些研究为理解CD46与麻疹病毒H蛋白之间发生的结构相互作用奠定了基础。