Section Virology, Division Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Department Biomolecular Health Sciences, Faculty Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Department Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences and Bijvoet Center for Biomolecular Research, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
PLoS Pathog. 2023 Mar 27;19(3):e1011273. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1011273. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Many viruses initiate infection by binding to sialoglycan receptors at the cell surface. Binding to such receptors comes at a cost, however, as the sheer abundance of sialoglycans e.g. in mucus, may immobilize virions to non-functional decoy receptors. As a solution, sialoglycan-binding as well as sialoglycan-cleavage activities are often present in these viruses, which for paramyxoviruses are combined in the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) protein. The dynamic interactions of sialoglycan-binding paramyxoviruses with their receptors are thought to be key determinants of species tropism, replication and pathogenesis. Here we used biolayer interferometry to perform kinetic analyses of receptor interactions of animal and human paramyxoviruses (Newcastle disease virus, Sendai virus, and human parainfluenza virus 3). We show that these viruses display strikingly different receptor interaction dynamics, which correlated with their receptor-binding and -cleavage activities and the presence of a second sialic acid binding site. Virion binding was followed by sialidase-driven release, during which virions cleaved sialoglycans until a virus-specific density was reached, which was largely independent of virion concentration. Sialidase-driven virion release was furthermore shown to be a cooperative process and to be affected by pH. We propose that paramyxoviruses display sialidase-driven virion motility on a receptor-coated surface, until a threshold receptor density is reached at which virions start to dissociate. Similar motility has previously been observed for influenza viruses and is likely to also apply to sialoglycan-interacting embecoviruses. Analysis of the balance between receptor-binding and -cleavage increases our understanding of host species tropism determinants and zoonotic potential of viruses.
许多病毒通过与细胞表面的唾液酸糖蛋白受体结合来启动感染。然而,与这些受体结合是有代价的,因为唾液酸糖蛋白的绝对丰富度,例如在黏液中,可能会使病毒颗粒固定在非功能性诱饵受体上。作为解决方案,这些病毒通常具有唾液酸糖蛋白结合和唾液酸糖蛋白裂解活性,对于副黏病毒,这些活性结合在血凝素神经氨酸酶 (HN) 蛋白中。唾液酸糖蛋白结合的副黏病毒与它们的受体之间的动态相互作用被认为是物种嗜性、复制和发病机制的关键决定因素。在这里,我们使用生物层干涉法对动物和人类副黏病毒(新城疫病毒、仙台病毒和人副流感病毒 3)的受体相互作用进行了动力学分析。我们表明,这些病毒显示出截然不同的受体相互作用动力学,这与它们的受体结合和裂解活性以及第二个唾液酸结合位点的存在相关。病毒颗粒结合后,会发生唾液酸酶驱动的释放,在此过程中,病毒颗粒会切割唾液酸糖蛋白,直到达到病毒特异性密度,而这与病毒颗粒浓度基本无关。此外,还表明唾液酸酶驱动的病毒颗粒释放是一个协作过程,并受 pH 值影响。我们提出,副黏病毒在受体包被的表面上显示出唾液酸酶驱动的病毒颗粒运动,直到达到病毒颗粒开始解离的阈值受体密度。以前已经观察到流感病毒具有类似的运动性,并且可能也适用于与唾液酸糖蛋白相互作用的嵌杯病毒。对受体结合和裂解之间平衡的分析增加了我们对宿主物种嗜性决定因素和病毒人畜共患病潜力的理解。