Palmer Samantha G, DeVito Ilaria, Jenkins Stephen G, Niewiesk Stefan, Porotto Matteo, Moscona Anne
Departments of Pediatrics and of Microbiology and Immunology, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA.
Department of Pathology, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA.
J Virol. 2014 Nov;88(22):13495-502. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01965-14. Epub 2014 Sep 10.
Human parainfluenza viruses (HPIVs) cause widespread respiratory infections, with no vaccines or effective treatments. We show that the molecular determinants for HPIV3 growth in vitro are fundamentally different from those required in vivo and that these differences impact inhibitor susceptibility. HPIV infects its target cells by coordinated action of the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase receptor-binding protein (HN) and the fusion envelope glycoprotein (F), which together comprise the molecular fusion machinery; upon receptor engagement by HN, the prefusion F undergoes a structural transition, extending and inserting into the target cell membrane and then refolding into a postfusion structure that fuses the viral and cell membranes. Peptides derived from key regions of F can potently inhibit HPIV infection at the entry stage, by interfering with the structural transition of F. We show that clinically circulating viruses have fusion machinery that is more stable and less readily activated than viruses adapted to growth in culture. Fusion machinery that is advantageous for growth in human airway epithelia and in vivo confers susceptibility to peptide fusion inhibitors in the host lung tissue or animal, but the same fusion inhibitors have no effect on viruses whose fusion glycoproteins are suited for growth in vitro. We propose that for potential clinical efficacy, antivirals should be evaluated using clinical isolates in natural host tissue rather than lab strains of virus in cultured cells. The unique susceptibility of clinical strains in human tissues reflects viral inhibition in vivo.
Acute respiratory infection is the leading cause of mortality in young children under 5 years of age, causing nearly 20% of childhood deaths worldwide each year. The paramyxoviruses, including human parainfluenza viruses (HPIVs), cause a large share of these illnesses. There are no vaccines or drugs for the HPIVs. Inhibiting entry of viruses into the human cell is a promising drug strategy that blocks the first step in infection. To develop antivirals that inhibit entry, it is critical to understand the first steps of infection. We found that clinical viruses isolated from patients have very different entry properties from those of the viruses generally studied in laboratories. The viral entry mechanism is less active and more sensitive to fusion inhibitory molecules. We propose that to interfere with viral infection, we test clinically circulating viruses in natural tissues, to develop antivirals against respiratory disease caused by HPIVs.
人副流感病毒(HPIVs)会引发广泛的呼吸道感染,目前尚无疫苗或有效治疗方法。我们发现,HPIV3体外生长的分子决定因素与体内所需的因素根本不同,且这些差异会影响抑制剂的敏感性。HPIV通过血凝素 - 神经氨酸酶受体结合蛋白(HN)和融合包膜糖蛋白(F)的协同作用感染其靶细胞,这两者共同构成分子融合机制;在HN与受体结合后,融合前的F会发生结构转变,伸展并插入靶细胞膜,然后重新折叠成融合后结构,使病毒膜与细胞膜融合。源自F关键区域的肽可通过干扰F的结构转变在进入阶段有效抑制HPIV感染。我们发现,临床流行病毒的融合机制比适应在培养中生长的病毒更稳定,且更不易被激活。有利于在人气道上皮细胞和体内生长的融合机制会使宿主肺组织或动物对肽融合抑制剂敏感,但相同的融合抑制剂对其融合糖蛋白适合在体外生长的病毒没有作用。我们提出,为了获得潜在的临床疗效,应使用天然宿主组织中的临床分离株而非培养细胞中的实验室病毒株来评估抗病毒药物。临床菌株在人体组织中的独特敏感性反映了体内的病毒抑制作用。
急性呼吸道感染是5岁以下幼儿死亡的主要原因,每年导致全球近20%的儿童死亡。包括人副流感病毒(HPIVs)在内的副粘病毒导致了很大一部分此类疾病。目前尚无针对HPIVs的疫苗或药物。抑制病毒进入人体细胞是一种有前景的药物策略,可阻断感染的第一步。要开发抑制进入的抗病毒药物,了解感染的第一步至关重要。我们发现,从患者分离出的临床病毒与实验室通常研究的病毒具有非常不同的进入特性。病毒进入机制活性较低,且对融合抑制分子更敏感。我们提出,为了干扰病毒感染,应在天然组织中测试临床流行病毒,以开发针对由HPIVs引起的呼吸道疾病的抗病毒药物。