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Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process

Despite large vaccination campaigns, measles virus (MeV) and canine distemper virus (CDV) cause major morbidity and mortality in humans and animals, respectively. The MeV and CDV cell entry system relies on two interacting envelope glycoproteins: the attachment protein (H), consisting of stalk and h...

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Autores principales: Ader-Ebert, Nadine, Khosravi, Mojtaba, Herren, Michael, Avila, Mislay, Alves, Lisa, Bringolf, Fanny, Örvell, Claes, Langedijk, Johannes P., Zurbriggen, Andreas, Plemper, Richard K., Plattet, Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4422687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25946112
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004880
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author Ader-Ebert, Nadine
Khosravi, Mojtaba
Herren, Michael
Avila, Mislay
Alves, Lisa
Bringolf, Fanny
Örvell, Claes
Langedijk, Johannes P.
Zurbriggen, Andreas
Plemper, Richard K.
Plattet, Philippe
author_facet Ader-Ebert, Nadine
Khosravi, Mojtaba
Herren, Michael
Avila, Mislay
Alves, Lisa
Bringolf, Fanny
Örvell, Claes
Langedijk, Johannes P.
Zurbriggen, Andreas
Plemper, Richard K.
Plattet, Philippe
author_sort Ader-Ebert, Nadine
collection PubMed
description Despite large vaccination campaigns, measles virus (MeV) and canine distemper virus (CDV) cause major morbidity and mortality in humans and animals, respectively. The MeV and CDV cell entry system relies on two interacting envelope glycoproteins: the attachment protein (H), consisting of stalk and head domains, co-operates with the fusion protein (F) to mediate membrane fusion. However, how receptor-binding by the H-protein leads to F-triggering is not fully understood. Here, we report that an anti-CDV-H monoclonal antibody (mAb-1347), which targets the linear H-stalk segment 126-133, potently inhibits membrane fusion without interfering with H receptor-binding or F-interaction. Rather, mAb-1347 blocked the F-triggering function of H-proteins regardless of the presence or absence of the head domains. Remarkably, mAb-1347 binding to headless CDV H, as well as standard and engineered bioactive stalk-elongated CDV H-constructs treated with cells expressing the SLAM receptor, was enhanced. Despite proper cell surface expression, fusion promotion by most H-stalk mutants harboring alanine substitutions in the 126-138 “spacer” section was substantially impaired, consistent with deficient receptor-induced mAb-1347 binding enhancement. However, a previously reported F-triggering defective H-I98A variant still exhibited the receptor-induced “head-stalk” rearrangement. Collectively, our data spotlight a distinct mechanism for morbillivirus membrane fusion activation: prior to receptor contact, at least one of the morbillivirus H-head domains interacts with the membrane-distal “spacer” domain in the H-stalk, leaving the F-binding site located further membrane-proximal in the stalk fully accessible. This “head-to-spacer” interaction conformationally stabilizes H in an auto-repressed state, which enables intracellular H-stalk/F engagement while preventing the inherent H-stalk’s bioactivity that may prematurely activate F. Receptor-contact disrupts the “head-to-spacer” interaction, which subsequently “unlocks” the stalk, allowing it to rearrange and trigger F. Overall, our study reveals essential mechanistic requirements governing the activation of the morbillivirus membrane fusion cascade and spotlights the H-stalk “spacer” microdomain as a possible drug target for antiviral therapy.
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spelling pubmed-44226872015-05-12 Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process Ader-Ebert, Nadine Khosravi, Mojtaba Herren, Michael Avila, Mislay Alves, Lisa Bringolf, Fanny Örvell, Claes Langedijk, Johannes P. Zurbriggen, Andreas Plemper, Richard K. Plattet, Philippe PLoS Pathog Research Article Despite large vaccination campaigns, measles virus (MeV) and canine distemper virus (CDV) cause major morbidity and mortality in humans and animals, respectively. The MeV and CDV cell entry system relies on two interacting envelope glycoproteins: the attachment protein (H), consisting of stalk and head domains, co-operates with the fusion protein (F) to mediate membrane fusion. However, how receptor-binding by the H-protein leads to F-triggering is not fully understood. Here, we report that an anti-CDV-H monoclonal antibody (mAb-1347), which targets the linear H-stalk segment 126-133, potently inhibits membrane fusion without interfering with H receptor-binding or F-interaction. Rather, mAb-1347 blocked the F-triggering function of H-proteins regardless of the presence or absence of the head domains. Remarkably, mAb-1347 binding to headless CDV H, as well as standard and engineered bioactive stalk-elongated CDV H-constructs treated with cells expressing the SLAM receptor, was enhanced. Despite proper cell surface expression, fusion promotion by most H-stalk mutants harboring alanine substitutions in the 126-138 “spacer” section was substantially impaired, consistent with deficient receptor-induced mAb-1347 binding enhancement. However, a previously reported F-triggering defective H-I98A variant still exhibited the receptor-induced “head-stalk” rearrangement. Collectively, our data spotlight a distinct mechanism for morbillivirus membrane fusion activation: prior to receptor contact, at least one of the morbillivirus H-head domains interacts with the membrane-distal “spacer” domain in the H-stalk, leaving the F-binding site located further membrane-proximal in the stalk fully accessible. This “head-to-spacer” interaction conformationally stabilizes H in an auto-repressed state, which enables intracellular H-stalk/F engagement while preventing the inherent H-stalk’s bioactivity that may prematurely activate F. Receptor-contact disrupts the “head-to-spacer” interaction, which subsequently “unlocks” the stalk, allowing it to rearrange and trigger F. Overall, our study reveals essential mechanistic requirements governing the activation of the morbillivirus membrane fusion cascade and spotlights the H-stalk “spacer” microdomain as a possible drug target for antiviral therapy. Public Library of Science 2015-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4422687/ /pubmed/25946112 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004880 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ader-Ebert, Nadine
Khosravi, Mojtaba
Herren, Michael
Avila, Mislay
Alves, Lisa
Bringolf, Fanny
Örvell, Claes
Langedijk, Johannes P.
Zurbriggen, Andreas
Plemper, Richard K.
Plattet, Philippe
Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process
title Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process
title_full Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process
title_fullStr Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process
title_full_unstemmed Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process
title_short Sequential Conformational Changes in the Morbillivirus Attachment Protein Initiate the Membrane Fusion Process
title_sort sequential conformational changes in the morbillivirus attachment protein initiate the membrane fusion process
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4422687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25946112
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004880
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