Structural and serological evidence for a novel mechanism of antigenic variation in foot-and-mouth disease virus
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 347 (6293) , 569-572
- https://doi.org/10.1038/347569a0
Abstract
Changes resulting in altered antigenic properties of viruses nearly always occur on their surface and have been attributed to the substitution of residues directly involved in binding antibody. To investigate the mechanism of antigenic variation in foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), variants that escape neutralization by a monoclonal antibody have been compared crystallographically and serologically with parental virus. FMDVs form one of the four genera of the Picornaviridae. The unenveloped icosahedral shell comprises 60 copies each of four structural proteins VP1-4. Representatives from each of the genera have similar overall structure, but differences in the external features. For example, human rhinovirus has a pronounced 'canyon' that is proposed to contain the cell attachment site, whereas elements of the attachment site for FMDV, which involves the G-H loop (residues 134-160) and C-terminus (200-213) of VP1, are exposed on the surface. Moreover, this G-H loop, which is a major antigenic site of FMDV, forms a prominent, highly accessible protrusion, a feature not seen in other picornaviruses. It is this loop that is perturbed in the variant viruses that we have studied. The amino acid mutations characterizing the variants are not at positions directly involved in antibody binding, but result in far-reaching perturbations of the surface structure of the virus. Thus, this virus seems to use a novel escape mechanism whereby an induced conformational change in a major antigenic loop destroys the integrity of the epitope.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neutralizing Epitopes of Type O Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus. II. Mapping Three Conformational Sites with Synthetic Peptide ReagentsJournal of General Virology, 1989
- Neutralizing Epitopes of Type O Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus. I. Identification and Characterization of Three Functionally Independent, Conformational SitesJournal of General Virology, 1989
- The major human rhinovirus receptor is ICAM-1Published by Elsevier ,1989
- The Cell Attachment Site on Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Includes the Amino Acid Sequence RGD (Arginine-Glycine-Aspartic Acid)Journal of General Virology, 1989
- A cell adhesion molecule, ICAM-1, is the major surface receptor for rhinovirusesCell, 1989
- The three-dimensional structure of foot-and-mouth disease virus at 2.9 Å resolutionNature, 1989
- Evidence for the direct involvement of the rhinovirus canyon in receptor binding.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1988
- The Atomic Structure of Mengo Virus at 3.0 Å ResolutionScience, 1987
- Three-Dimensional Structure of Poliovirus at 2.9 Å ResolutionScience, 1985
- Structure of a human common cold virus and functional relationship to other picornavirusesNature, 1985