Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Bio-Science, Nagahama Institute of Bio-Science and Technology, Nagahama, Shiga, Japan.
Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Department of Pathology, Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Shiga, Japan.
J Gen Virol. 2021 Oct;102(10). doi: 10.1099/jgv.0.001682.
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by a measles virus (MV) variant, SSPE virus, that accumulates mutations during long-term persistent infection of the central nervous system (CNS). Clusters of mutations identified around the matrix (M) protein in many SSPE viruses suppress productive infectious particle release and accelerate cell-cell fusion, which are features of SSPE viruses. It was reported, however, that these defects of M protein function might not be correlated directly with promotion of neurovirulence, although they might enable establishment of persistent infection. Neuropathogenicity is closely related to the character of the viral fusion (F) protein, and amino acid substitution(s) in the F protein of some SSPE viruses confers F protein hyperfusogenicity, facilitating viral propagation in the CNS through cell-cell fusion and leading to neurovirulence. The F protein of an SSPE virus Kobe-1 strain, however, displayed only moderately enhanced fusion activity and required additional mutations in the M protein for neuropathogenicity in mice. We demonstrated here the mechanism for the M protein of the Kobe-1 strain supporting the fusion activity of the F protein and cooperatively inducing neurovirulence, even though each protein, independently, has no effect on virulence. The occurrence of SSPE has been estimated recently as one in several thousand in children who acquired measles under the age of 5 years, markedly higher than reported previously. The probability of a specific mutation (or mutations) occurring in the F protein conferring hyperfusogenicity and neuropathogenicity might not be sufficient to explain the high frequency of SSPE. The induction of neurovirulence by M protein synergistically with moderately fusogenic F protein could account for the high frequency of SSPE.
亚急性硬化性全脑炎(SSPE)是一种罕见的致命性神经退行性疾病,由麻疹病毒(MV)变异株 SSPE 病毒引起,该病毒在中枢神经系统(CNS)的长期持续感染过程中积累突变。在许多 SSPE 病毒中,鉴定到围绕基质(M)蛋白的突变簇会抑制有活力的感染性颗粒的释放,并加速细胞-细胞融合,这是 SSPE 病毒的特征。然而,据报道,尽管这些 M 蛋白功能缺陷可能使持续感染得以建立,但它们与神经毒力的促进不一定直接相关。神经致病性与病毒融合(F)蛋白的特征密切相关,一些 SSPE 病毒的 F 蛋白中的氨基酸取代赋予 F 蛋白超融合性,通过细胞-细胞融合促进 CNS 中的病毒传播,并导致神经毒力。然而,SSPE 病毒 Kobe-1 株的 F 蛋白仅显示出适度增强的融合活性,并且需要在 M 蛋白中发生额外突变才能在小鼠中引起神经致病性。在这里,我们证明了 Kobe-1 株的 M 蛋白支持 F 蛋白的融合活性并协同诱导神经毒力的机制,尽管每种蛋白独立时对毒力没有影响。最近估计,在 5 岁以下感染麻疹的儿童中,SSPE 的发生率为每几千例中一例,明显高于以前的报告。特定突变(或突变)在 F 蛋白中发生的频率赋予超融合性和神经致病性,这可能不足以解释 SSPE 的高频率。M 蛋白与中度融合 F 蛋白协同诱导神经毒力可以解释 SSPE 的高频率。