Entry of Duck Hepatitis B Virus into Primary Duck Liver and Kidney Cells after Discovery of a Fusogenic Region within the Large Surface Protein
Autor: | Shau-Feng Chang, Alicja Iwanski, Claudia Maenz, Michael Bruns |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
viruses
Immunology Duck hepatitis B virus Kidney medicine.disease_cause Microbiology Virus Cell Line Hepatitis B Virus Duck Viral Envelope Proteins Viral entry Virology medicine Animals Chymotrypsin Cells Cultured Hepatitis B virus Avihepadnavirus biology Virus Internalization Hepatitis B biology.organism_classification medicine.disease Virus-Cell Interactions Protein Structure Tertiary Ducks Carboxypeptidase D Hepadnaviridae Insect Science Hepatocytes Chickens Viral Fusion Proteins |
Zdroj: | Journal of Virology. 81:5014-5023 |
ISSN: | 1098-5514 0022-538X |
DOI: | 10.1128/jvi.02290-06 |
Popis: | Hepatitis B viruses exhibit a narrow host range specificity that is believed to be mediated by a domain of the large surface protein, designated L. For duck hepatitis B virus, it has been shown that the pre-S domain of L binds to carboxypeptidase D, a cellular receptor present in many species on a wide variety of cell types. Nonetheless, only hepatocytes become infected. It has remained vague which viral features determine host range specificity and organotropicity. By using chymotrypsin to treat duck hepatitis B virus, we addressed the question of whether a putative fusogenic region within the amino-terminal end of the small surface protein may participate in viral entry and possibly constitute one of the determinants of the host range of the virus. Addition of the enzyme to virions resulted in increased infectivity. Remarkably, even remnants of enzyme-treated subviral particles proved to be inhibitory to infection. A noninfectious deletion mutant devoid of the binding region for carboxypeptidase D could be rendered infectious for primary duck hepatocytes by treatment with chymotrypsin. Although because of the protease treatment mutant and wild-type viruses may have become infectious in an unspecific and receptor-independent manner, their host range specificity was not affected, as shown by the inability of the virus to replicate in different hepatoma cell lines, as well as primary chicken hepatocytes. Instead, the organotropicity of the virus could be reduced, which was demonstrated by infection of primary duck kidney cells. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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