Identification of carbohydrate-binding domains in the attachment proteins of type 1 and type 3 reoviruses

JD Chappell, JL Duong, BW Wright… - Journal of …, 2000 - Am Soc Microbiol
JD Chappell, JL Duong, BW Wright, TS Dermody
Journal of Virology, 2000Am Soc Microbiol
The reovirus attachment protein, ς1, is responsible for strain-specific patterns of viral tropism
in the murine central nervous system and receptor binding on cultured cells. The ς1 protein
consists of a fibrous tail domain proximal to the virion surface and a virion-distal globular
head domain. To better understand mechanisms of reovirus attachment to cells, we
conducted studies to identify the region of ς1 that binds cell surface carbohydrate. Chimeric
and truncated ς1 proteins derived from prototype reovirus strains type 1 Lang (T1L) and type …
Abstract
The reovirus attachment protein, ς1, is responsible for strain-specific patterns of viral tropism in the murine central nervous system and receptor binding on cultured cells. The ς1 protein consists of a fibrous tail domain proximal to the virion surface and a virion-distal globular head domain. To better understand mechanisms of reovirus attachment to cells, we conducted studies to identify the region of ς1 that binds cell surface carbohydrate. Chimeric and truncated ς1 proteins derived from prototype reovirus strains type 1 Lang (T1L) and type 3 Dearing (T3D) were expressed in insect cells by using a baculovirus vector. Assessment of expressed protein susceptibility to proteolytic cleavage, binding to anti-ς1 antibodies, and oligomerization indicates that the chimeric and truncated ς1 proteins are properly folded. To assess carbohydrate binding, recombinant ς1 proteins were tested for the capacity to agglutinate mammalian erythrocytes and to bind sialic acid presented on glycophorin, the cell surface molecule bound by type 3 reovirus on human erythrocytes. Using a panel of two wild-type and ten chimeric and truncated ς1 proteins, the sialic acid-binding domain of type 3 ς1 was mapped to a region of sequence proposed to form the more amino terminal of two predicted β-sheet structures in the tail. This unit corresponds to morphologic region T(iii) observed in computer-processed electron micrographs of ς1 protein purified from virions. In contrast, the homologous region of T1L ς1 sequence was not implicated in carbohydrate binding; rather, sequences in the distal portion of the tail known as the neck were required. Results of these studies demonstrate that a functional receptor-binding domain, which uses sialic acid as its ligand, is contained within morphologic region T(iii) of the type 3 ς1 tail. Furthermore, our findings indicate that T1L and T3D ς1 proteins contain different arrangements of receptor-binding domains.
American Society for Microbiology