Type 1 human poliovirus binds to human synaptosomes

Abstract
Poliovirus is a neurotropic virus that selectively infects human motoneurons in vivo. The basis for the specificity of this infection is not fully understood. It has been suggested that this tropism occurs because motoneurons are the only neurons to express poliovirus receptors. We have examined this hypothesis by measuring the binding of 125I‐labeled poliovirus type 1 to neural tissues. With this assay we have detected highly specific binding sites in human but not rodent neural tissue. Regional assays of binding in human central nervous system homogenates demonstrate that binding sites are not confined to motoneurons. Rather, they are widely distributed throughout the human neuraxis. Particularly in the forebrain, binding is more abundant in gray than white matter. For this reason, we performed tissue fractionation studies which indicate that poliovirus binding sites are enriched in synaptosomes, the subfraction of central nervous system gray matter tissue rich in synaptic endings. The preferential expression of poliovirus binding sites in synaptic endings may be an important factor in the motor tropism of this virus, inasmuch as the major category of neurons with synaptic endings outside the central nervous system are motoneurons; thus, particles of virus may preferentially bind to this cell type during poliovirus viremia.