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Identification of Equine Lactadherin-derived Peptides That Inhibit Rotavirus Infection via Integrin Receptor Competition

Authors :
Maria Gabriella Giuffrida
Yoshikazu Takada
Andrea Civra
David Lembo
Lorenzo Napolitano
Manuela Donalisio
Barbara S. Coulson
Amedeo Conti
Source :
The Journal of biological chemistry, 290 (2015): 12403–12414. doi:10.1074/jbc.M114.620500, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Civra, Andrea; Giuffrida, Maria Gabriella; Donalisio, Manuela; Napolitano, Lorenzo; Takada, Yoshikazu; Coulson, Barbara S.; Conti, Amedeo; Lembo, David/titolo:Identification of Equine Lactadherin-derived Peptides That Inhibit Rotavirus Infection via Integrin Receptor Competition/doi:10.1074%2Fjbc.M114.620500/rivista:The Journal of biological chemistry (Print)/anno:2015/pagina_da:12403/pagina_a:12414/intervallo_pagine:12403–12414/volume:290, The Journal of biological chemistry, vol 290, iss 19
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Human rotavirus is the leading cause of severe gastroenteritis in infants and children under the age of 5 years in both developed and developing countries. Human lactadherin, a milk fat globule membrane glycoprotein, inhibits human rotavirus infection in vitro, whereas bovine lactadherin is not active. Moreover, it protects breastfed infants against symptomatic rotavirus infections. To explore the potential antiviral activity of lactadherin sourced by equines, we undertook a proteomic analysis of milk fat globule membrane proteins from donkey milk and elucidated its amino acid sequence. Alignment of the human, bovine, and donkey lactadherin sequences revealed the presence of an Asp-Gly-Glu (DGE) α2β1 integrin-binding motif in the N-terminal domain of donkey sequence only. Because integrin α2β1 plays a critical role during early steps of rotavirus host cell adhesion, we tested a minilibrary of donkey lactadherin-derived peptides containing DGE sequence for anti-rotavirus activity. A 20-amino acid peptide containing both DGE and RGD motifs (named pDGE-RGD) showed the greatest activity, and its mechanism of antiviral action was characterized; pDGE-RGD binds to integrin α2β1 by means of the DGE motif and inhibits rotavirus attachment to the cell surface. These findings suggest the potential anti-rotavirus activity of equine lactadherin and support the feasibility of developing an anti-rotavirus peptide that acts by hindering virus-receptor binding.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
290
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d13d1aa36a37d3d4ef00b92ccb8cf30
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m114.620500