Department of Molecular Genetics & Microbiology, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2012 Feb;8(2):e1002519. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002519. Epub 2012 Feb 9.
A subset of human papillomavirus (HPV) infections is causally related to the development of human epithelial tumors and cancers. Like a number of pathogens, HPV entry into target cells is initiated by first binding to heparan sulfonated proteoglycan (HSPG) cell surface attachment factors. The virus must then move to distinct secondary receptors, which are responsible for particle internalization. Despite intensive investigation, the mechanism of HPV movement to and the nature of the secondary receptors have been unclear. We report that HPV16 particles are not liberated from bound HSPG attachment factors by dissociation, but rather are released by a process previously unreported for pathogen-host cell interactions. Virus particles reside in infectious soluble high molecular weight complexes with HSPG, including syndecan-1 and bioactive compounds, like growth factors. Matrix mellatoproteinase inhibitors that block HSPG and virus release from cells interfere with virus infection. Employing a co-culture assay, we demonstrate HPV associated with soluble HSPG-growth factor complexes can infect cells lacking HSPG. Interaction of HPV-HSPG-growth factor complexes with growth factor receptors leads to rapid activation of signaling pathways important for infection, whereas a variety of growth factor receptor inhibitors impede virus-induced signaling and infection. Depletion of syndecan-1 or epidermal growth factor and removal of serum factors reduce infection, while replenishment of growth factors restores infection. Our findings support an infection model whereby HPV usurps normal host mechanisms for presenting growth factors to cells via soluble HSPG complexes as a novel method for interacting with entry receptors independent of direct virus-cell receptor interactions.
人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)感染的一个子集与人类上皮肿瘤和癌症的发展有因果关系。与许多病原体一样,HPV 进入靶细胞首先是通过与硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖(HSPG)细胞表面附着因子结合来启动的。然后,病毒必须移动到不同的次级受体,这些受体负责颗粒内化。尽管进行了深入研究,但 HPV 向次级受体移动的机制及其性质仍不清楚。我们报告说,HPV16 颗粒不是通过解离从结合的 HSPG 附着因子中释放出来的,而是通过以前未报道过的病原体-宿主细胞相互作用的过程释放出来的。病毒颗粒与 HSPG 一起存在于传染性可溶性高分子量复合物中,包括 syndecan-1 和生物活性化合物,如生长因子。基质金属蛋白酶抑制剂可阻断 HSPG 和病毒从细胞中释放,从而干扰病毒感染。通过共培养测定,我们证明与可溶性 HSPG-生长因子复合物相关的 HPV 可以感染缺乏 HSPG 的细胞。HPV-HSPG-生长因子复合物与生长因子受体的相互作用导致与感染相关的信号通路的快速激活,而各种生长因子受体抑制剂会阻碍病毒诱导的信号转导和感染。syndecan-1 或表皮生长因子的耗尽和血清因子的去除会降低感染,而生长因子的补充则会恢复感染。我们的发现支持一种感染模型,即 HPV 通过可溶性 HSPG 复合物利用正常宿主机制将生长因子呈递给细胞,作为一种与进入受体相互作用的新方法,而不依赖于直接的病毒-细胞受体相互作用。