Herpes simplex virus glycoproteins H/L bind to cells independently of {alpha}V{beta}3 integrin and inhibit virus entry, and their constitutive expression restricts infection.
Title | Herpes simplex virus glycoproteins H/L bind to cells independently of {alpha}V{beta}3 integrin and inhibit virus entry, and their constitutive expression restricts infection. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2010 |
Authors | Gianni, Tatiana, Cerretani Arianna, Dubois Rebecca, Salvioli Stefano, Blystone Scott S., Rey Felix, and Campadelli-Fiume Gabriella |
Journal | J Virol |
Volume | 84 |
Issue | 8 |
Pagination | 4013-25 |
Date Published | 2010 Apr |
ISSN | 1098-5514 |
Keywords | Animals, Cell Line, Humans, Integrin beta3, Protein Binding, Simplexvirus, Viral Envelope Proteins, Virus Internalization |
Abstract | Herpes simplex virus (HSV) fusion with cells requires the gD, gB, and gH/gL glycoprotein quartet. gD serves as a receptor binding glycoprotein. gB and gH/gL execute fusion in an as-yet-unclear manner. To better understand the role of gH/gL in HSV entry, we produced a soluble version of gH/gL carrying a One-STrEP tag (gH(t.st)/gL). Previous findings implicated integrins as possible ligands to gH/gL (C. Parry et al., J. Gen. Virol. 86:7-10, 2005). We report that (i) gH(t.st)/gL bound a number of cells in a dose-dependent manner at concentrations similar to those required for the binding of soluble gB or gD. (ii) gH(t.st)/gL inhibited HSV entry at the same concentrations required for binding. It also inhibited cell-cell fusion in transfected cells. (iii) The absence of beta3 integrin did not prevent the binding of gH(t.st)/gL to CHO cells and infection inhibition. Conversely, integrin-negative K562 cells did not acquire the ability to bind gH(t.st)/gL when hyperexpressing alphaVbeta3 integrin. (iv) Constitutive expression of wild-type gH/gL (wt-gH/gL) restricted infection in all of the cell lines tested, a behavior typical of glycoproteins which bind cellular receptors. The extent of restriction broadly paralleled the efficiency of gH/gL transfection. RGD motif mutant gH/gL could not be differentiated from wt-gH with respect to restriction of infection. Cumulatively, the present results provide several lines of evidence that HSV gH/gL interacts with a cell surface cognate protein(s), that this protein is not necessarily an alphaVbeta3 integrin, and that this interaction is required for the process of virus entry/fusion. |
DOI | 10.1128/JVI.02502-09 |
Alternate Journal | J. Virol. |
PubMed ID | 20147400 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC2849490 |
Grant List | R01 DK079884 / DK / NIDDK NIH HHS / United States |