1. Fibrinogen Gamma Chain Promotes Aggregation of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus in Saliva
- Author
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Valesca Anschau, Rafael Sanjuán, European Research Council, Sanjuán, Rafael, and Sanjuán, Rafael [0000-0002-1844-545X]
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Fibrinogen-gamma chain ,Virologia ,Saliva ,Virion aggregation ,viruses ,030106 microbiology ,Cell ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Viral transmission ,Proteomics ,Fibrinogen ,lcsh:Microbiology ,Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus ,Article ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,Label-free proteomics ,Downregulation and upregulation ,label-free proteomics ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Collective infectious units ,collective infectious units ,Cells, Cultured ,biology ,Chemistry ,viral transmission ,Virion ,RNA virus ,biology.organism_classification ,Virus ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,stomatognathic diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Vesicular stomatitis virus ,virion aggregation ,vesicular stomatitis virus ,Vesicular Stomatitis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This article belongs to the Section Animal Viruses., The spread of viruses among cells and hosts often involves multi-virion structures. For instance, virions can form aggregates that allow for the co-delivery of multiple genome copies to the same cell from a single infectious unit. Previously, we showed that vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), an enveloped, negative-strand RNA virus, undergoes strong aggregation in the presence of saliva from certain individuals. However, the molecular components responsible for such aggregation remain unknown. Here we show that saliva-driven aggregation is protein dependent, and we use comparative proteomics to analyze the protein content of strongly versus poorly aggregating saliva. Quantitative analysis of over 300 proteins led to the identification of 18 upregulated proteins in strongly aggregating saliva. One of these proteins, the fibrinogen gamma chain, was verified experimentally as a factor promoting VSV aggregation in a dose-dependent manner. This study hence identifies a protein responsible for saliva-driven VSV aggregation. Yet, the possible involvement of additional proteins or factors cannot be discarded., This research was funded by European Research Council Consolidator grant 724519-Vis-a-Vis.
- Published
- 2020