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The Bipartite Sequence Motif in the N and C Termini of gp85 of Subgroup J Avian Leukosis Virus Plays a Crucial Role in Receptor Binding and Viral Entry.

Authors :
Yao Zhang
Mengmeng Yu
Lixiao Xing
Peng Liu
Yuntong Chen
Fangfang Chang
Suyan Wang
Yuanling Bao
Muhammad Farooque
Xinyi Li
Xiaolu Guan
Yongzhen Liu
Aijing Liu
Xiaole Qi
Qing Pan
Yanping Zhang
Li Gao
Kai Li
Changjun Liu
Hongyu Cui
Source :
Journal of Virology. Nov2020, Vol. 94 Issue 22, p1-18. 18p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Subgroup J avian leukemia virus (ALV-J), belonging to the genus Alpharetrovirus, enters cells through its envelope surface unit (gp85) via specifically recognizing the cellular receptor chicken Na+/H+ exchanger type I (chNHE1), the 28 to 39 N-terminal residues of which were characterized as the minimal receptor functional domain in our previous studies. In this study, to further clarify the precise organization and properties of the interaction between ALV-J gp85 and chNHE1, we identified the chNHE1-binding domain of ALV-J gp85 using a series of gp85 mutants with segment substitutions and evaluating their effects on chNHE1 binding in proteincell binding assays. Our results showed that hemagglutinin (HA) substitutions of amino acids (aa) 38 to 131 (N terminus of gp85) and aa 159 to 283 (C terminus of gp85) significantly inhibited the interaction between gp85 and chNHE1/chNHE1 loop 1. In addition, these HA-substituted chimeric gp85 proteins could not effectively block the entry of ALV-J into chNHE1-expressing cells. Furthermore, analysis of various N-linked glycosylation sites and cysteine mutants in gp85 revealed that glycosylation sites (N6 and N11) and cysteines (C3 and C9) were directly involved in receptor-gp85 binding and important for the entry of ALV-J into cells. Taken together, our findings indicated that the bipartite sequence motif, spanning aa 38 to 131 and aa 159 to 283, of ALV-J gp85 was essential for binding to chNHE1, with its two N-linked glycosylation sites and two cysteines being important for its receptorbinding function and subsequent viral infection steps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022538X
Volume :
94
Issue :
22
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146772642
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01232-20