Enhanced antiviral activity of human surfactant protein d by site-specific engineering of the carbohydrate recognition domain

Autor: Eijk, M. van, Hillaire, M.L.B., Rimmelzwaan, G.F., Rynkiewicz, M.J., White, M.R., Hartshorn, K.L., Hessing, M., Koolmees, P.A., Tersteeg, M.H., Es, M.H. van, Meijerhof, T., Huckriede, A., Haagsman, H.P.
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: Frontiers in Immunology, OCT, 10
Popis: Innate immunity is critical in the early containment of influenza A virus (IAV) infection and surfactant protein D (SP-D) plays a crucial role in innate defense against IAV in the lungs. Multivalent lectin-mediated interactions of SP-D with IAVs result in viral aggregation, reduced epithelial infection, and enhanced IAV clearance by phagocytic cells. Previous studies showed that porcine SP-D (pSP-D) exhibits distinct antiviral activity against IAV as compared to human SP-D (hSP-D), mainly due to key residues in the lectin domain of pSP-D that contribute to its profound neutralizing activity. These observations provided the basis for the design of a full-length recombinant mutant form of hSP-D, designated as “improved SP-D” (iSP-D). Inspired by pSP-D, the lectin domain of iSP-D has 5 amino acids replaced (Asp324Asn, Asp330Asn, Val251Glu, Lys287Gln, Glu289Lys) and 3 amino acids inserted (326Gly-Ser-Ser). Characterization of iSP-D revealed no major differences in protein assembly and saccharide binding selectivity as compared to hSP-D. However, hemagglutination inhibition measurements showed that iSP-D expressed strongly enhanced activity compared to hSP-D against 31 different IAV strains tested, including (pandemic) IAVs that were resistant for neutralization by hSP-D. Furthermore, iSP-D showed increased viral aggregation and enhanced protection of MDCK cells against infection by IAV. Importantly, prophylactic or therapeutic application of iSP-D decreased weight loss and reduced viral lung titers in a murine model of IAV infection using a clinical isolate of H1N1pdm09 virus. These studies demonstrate the potential of iSP-D as a novel human-based antiviral inhalation drug that may provide immediate protection against or recovery from respiratory (pandemic) IAV infections in humans. Chemicals / CAS asparagine, 70-47-3, 7006-34-0; aspartic acid, 56-84-8, 6899-03-2; glutamine, 56-85-9, 6899-04-3; lysine, 56-87-1, 6899-06-5, 70-54-2; serine, 56-45-1, 6898-95-9; valine, 7004-03-7, 72-18-4
Databáze: OpenAIRE