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Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses

There are five antigenically distinct ebolaviruses that cause hemorrhagic fever in humans or non-human primates (Ebola virus, Sudan virus, Reston virus, Taï Forest virus, and Bundibugyo virus). The small handful of antibodies known to neutralize the ebolaviruses bind to the surface glycoprotein term...

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Autores principales: Bale, Shridhar, Dias, Joao M., Fusco, Marnie L., Hashiguchi, Takao, Wong, Anthony C., Liu, Tong, Keuhne, Ana I., Li, Sheng, Woods, Virgil L., Chandran, Kartik, Dye, John M., Saphire, Erica Ollmann
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3347318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22590681
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v4040447
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author Bale, Shridhar
Dias, Joao M.
Fusco, Marnie L.
Hashiguchi, Takao
Wong, Anthony C.
Liu, Tong
Keuhne, Ana I.
Li, Sheng
Woods, Virgil L.
Chandran, Kartik
Dye, John M.
Saphire, Erica Ollmann
author_facet Bale, Shridhar
Dias, Joao M.
Fusco, Marnie L.
Hashiguchi, Takao
Wong, Anthony C.
Liu, Tong
Keuhne, Ana I.
Li, Sheng
Woods, Virgil L.
Chandran, Kartik
Dye, John M.
Saphire, Erica Ollmann
author_sort Bale, Shridhar
collection PubMed
description There are five antigenically distinct ebolaviruses that cause hemorrhagic fever in humans or non-human primates (Ebola virus, Sudan virus, Reston virus, Taï Forest virus, and Bundibugyo virus). The small handful of antibodies known to neutralize the ebolaviruses bind to the surface glycoprotein termed GP(1,2). Curiously, some antibodies against them are known to neutralize in vitro but not protect in vivo, whereas other antibodies are known to protect animal models in vivo, but not neutralize in vitro. A detailed understanding of what constitutes a neutralizing and/or protective antibody response is critical for development of novel therapeutic strategies. Here, we show that paradoxically, a lower affinity antibody with restricted access to its epitope confers better neutralization than a higher affinity antibody against a similar epitope, suggesting that either subtle differences in epitope, or different characteristics of the GP(1,2) molecules themselves, confer differential neutralization susceptibility. Here, we also report the crystal structure of trimeric, prefusion GP(1,2) from the original 1976 Boniface variant of Sudan virus complexed with 16F6, the first antibody known to neutralize Sudan virus, and compare the structure to that of Sudan virus, variant Gulu. We discuss new structural details of the GP(1)-GP(2) clamp, thermal motion of various regions in GP(1,2) across the two viruses visualized, details of differential interaction of the crystallized neutralizing antibodies, and their relevance for virus neutralization.
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spelling pubmed-33473182012-05-15 Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses Bale, Shridhar Dias, Joao M. Fusco, Marnie L. Hashiguchi, Takao Wong, Anthony C. Liu, Tong Keuhne, Ana I. Li, Sheng Woods, Virgil L. Chandran, Kartik Dye, John M. Saphire, Erica Ollmann Viruses Article There are five antigenically distinct ebolaviruses that cause hemorrhagic fever in humans or non-human primates (Ebola virus, Sudan virus, Reston virus, Taï Forest virus, and Bundibugyo virus). The small handful of antibodies known to neutralize the ebolaviruses bind to the surface glycoprotein termed GP(1,2). Curiously, some antibodies against them are known to neutralize in vitro but not protect in vivo, whereas other antibodies are known to protect animal models in vivo, but not neutralize in vitro. A detailed understanding of what constitutes a neutralizing and/or protective antibody response is critical for development of novel therapeutic strategies. Here, we show that paradoxically, a lower affinity antibody with restricted access to its epitope confers better neutralization than a higher affinity antibody against a similar epitope, suggesting that either subtle differences in epitope, or different characteristics of the GP(1,2) molecules themselves, confer differential neutralization susceptibility. Here, we also report the crystal structure of trimeric, prefusion GP(1,2) from the original 1976 Boniface variant of Sudan virus complexed with 16F6, the first antibody known to neutralize Sudan virus, and compare the structure to that of Sudan virus, variant Gulu. We discuss new structural details of the GP(1)-GP(2) clamp, thermal motion of various regions in GP(1,2) across the two viruses visualized, details of differential interaction of the crystallized neutralizing antibodies, and their relevance for virus neutralization. MDPI 2012-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3347318/ /pubmed/22590681 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v4040447 Text en © 2012 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bale, Shridhar
Dias, Joao M.
Fusco, Marnie L.
Hashiguchi, Takao
Wong, Anthony C.
Liu, Tong
Keuhne, Ana I.
Li, Sheng
Woods, Virgil L.
Chandran, Kartik
Dye, John M.
Saphire, Erica Ollmann
Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses
title Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses
title_full Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses
title_fullStr Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses
title_full_unstemmed Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses
title_short Structural Basis for Differential Neutralization of Ebolaviruses
title_sort structural basis for differential neutralization of ebolaviruses
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3347318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22590681
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v4040447
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