Multiple Amino Acid Substitutions in Hemagglutinin Are Necessary for Wild-Type MeaslesVirus To Acquire the Ability To Use Receptor CD46 Efficiently
- 15 March 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 81 (6) , 2564-2572
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.02449-06
Abstract
Measles virus (MV) possesses two envelope glycoproteins, namely, the receptor-binding hemagglutinin (H) and fusion proteins. Wild-type MV strains isolated in B-lymphoid cell lines use signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM), but not CD46, as a cellular receptor, whereas MV vaccine strains of the Edmonston lineage use both SLAM and CD46 as receptors. Studies have shown that the residue at position 481 of the H protein is critical in determining the use of CD46 as a receptor. However, the wild-type IC-B strain with a single N481Y substitution in the H protein utilizes CD46 rather inefficiently. In this study, a number of chimeric and mutant H proteins, and recombinant viruses harboring them, were generated to determine which residues of the Edmonston H protein are responsible for its efficient use of CD46. Our results show that three substitutions (N390I and E492G plus N416D or T446S), in addition to N481Y, are necessary for the IC-B H protein to use CD46 efficiently as a receptor. The N390I, N416D, and T446S substitutions are present in the H proteins of all strains of the Edmonston lineage, whereas the E492G substitution is found only in the H protein of the Edmonston tag strain generated from cDNAs. The T484N substitution, found in some of the Edmonston-lineage strains, resulted in a similar effect on the use of CD46 to that caused by the E492G substitution. Thus, multiple residues in the H protein that have not previously been implicated have important roles in the interaction with CD46.Keywords
This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contributions of Matrix and Large Protein Genes of the Measles Virus Edmonston Strain to Growth in Cultured Cells as Revealed by Recombinant VirusesJournal of Virology, 2005
- Long Untranslated Regions of the Measles Virus M and F Genes Control Virus Replication and CytopathogenicityJournal of Virology, 2005
- Efficient rescue of measles virus from cloned cDNA using SLAM-expressing Chinese hamster ovary cellsVirus Research, 2005
- Selectively Receptor-Blind Measles Viruses: Identification of Residues Necessary for SLAM- or CD46-Induced Fusion and Their Localization on a New Hemagglutinin Structural ModelJournal of Virology, 2004
- Identification of a Second Major Site for CD46 Binding in the Hemagglutinin Protein from a Laboratory Strain of Measles Virus (MV): Potential Consequences for Wild-Type MV InfectionJournal of Virology, 2002
- Recombinant Wild-Type and Edmonston Strain Measles Viruses Bearing Heterologous H Proteins: Role of H Protein in Cell Fusion and Host Cell SpecificityJournal of Virology, 2002
- Comparison of sequences of the H, F, and N coding genes of measles virus vaccine strainsVirus Research, 1994
- Efficient selection for high-expression transfectants with a novel eukaryotic vectorGene, 1991
- Membrane Cofactor Protein (MCP or CD46): Newest Member of the Regulators of Complement Activation Gene ClusterAnnual Review of Immunology, 1991
- Specific inhibition of paramyxovirus and myxovirus replication by oligopeptides with amino acid sequences similar to those at the N-termini of the Fl or HA2 viral polypeptidesVirology, 1980