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Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor

Hosts and pathogens are locked in an evolutionary arms race. To infect mice, mouse hepatitis coronavirus (MHV) has evolved to recognize mouse CEACAM1a (mCEACAM1a) as its receptor. To elude MHV infections, mice may have evolved a variant allele from the Ceacam1a gene, called Ceacam1b, producing mCEAC...

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Autores principales: Peng, Guiqing, Yang, Yang, Pasquarella, Joseph R., Xu, Liqing, Qian, Zhaohui, Holmes, Kathryn V., Li, Fang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5313091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28035001
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.764266
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author Peng, Guiqing
Yang, Yang
Pasquarella, Joseph R.
Xu, Liqing
Qian, Zhaohui
Holmes, Kathryn V.
Li, Fang
author_facet Peng, Guiqing
Yang, Yang
Pasquarella, Joseph R.
Xu, Liqing
Qian, Zhaohui
Holmes, Kathryn V.
Li, Fang
author_sort Peng, Guiqing
collection PubMed
description Hosts and pathogens are locked in an evolutionary arms race. To infect mice, mouse hepatitis coronavirus (MHV) has evolved to recognize mouse CEACAM1a (mCEACAM1a) as its receptor. To elude MHV infections, mice may have evolved a variant allele from the Ceacam1a gene, called Ceacam1b, producing mCEACAM1b, which is a much poorer MHV receptor than mCEACAM1a. Previous studies showed that sequence differences between mCEACAM1a and mCEACAM1b in a critical MHV-binding CC′ loop partially account for the low receptor activity of mCEACAM1b, but detailed structural and molecular mechanisms for the differential MHV receptor activities of mCEACAM1a and mCEACAM1b remained elusive. Here we have determined the crystal structure of mCEACAM1b and identified the structural differences and additional residue differences between mCEACAM1a and mCEACAM1b that affect MHV binding and entry. These differences include conformational alterations of the CC′ loop as well as residue variations in other MHV-binding regions, including β-strands C′ and C′′ and loop C′C′′. Using pseudovirus entry and protein-protein binding assays, we show that substituting the structural and residue features from mCEACAM1b into mCEACAM1a reduced the viral receptor activity of mCEACAM1a, whereas substituting the reverse changes from mCEACAM1a into mCEACAM1b increased the viral receptor activity of mCEACAM1b. These results elucidate the detailed molecular mechanism for how mice may have kept pace in the evolutionary arms race with MHV by undergoing structural and residue changes in the MHV receptor, providing insight into this possible example of pathogen-driven evolution of a host receptor protein.
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spelling pubmed-53130912018-02-10 Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor Peng, Guiqing Yang, Yang Pasquarella, Joseph R. Xu, Liqing Qian, Zhaohui Holmes, Kathryn V. Li, Fang J Biol Chem Microbiology Hosts and pathogens are locked in an evolutionary arms race. To infect mice, mouse hepatitis coronavirus (MHV) has evolved to recognize mouse CEACAM1a (mCEACAM1a) as its receptor. To elude MHV infections, mice may have evolved a variant allele from the Ceacam1a gene, called Ceacam1b, producing mCEACAM1b, which is a much poorer MHV receptor than mCEACAM1a. Previous studies showed that sequence differences between mCEACAM1a and mCEACAM1b in a critical MHV-binding CC′ loop partially account for the low receptor activity of mCEACAM1b, but detailed structural and molecular mechanisms for the differential MHV receptor activities of mCEACAM1a and mCEACAM1b remained elusive. Here we have determined the crystal structure of mCEACAM1b and identified the structural differences and additional residue differences between mCEACAM1a and mCEACAM1b that affect MHV binding and entry. These differences include conformational alterations of the CC′ loop as well as residue variations in other MHV-binding regions, including β-strands C′ and C′′ and loop C′C′′. Using pseudovirus entry and protein-protein binding assays, we show that substituting the structural and residue features from mCEACAM1b into mCEACAM1a reduced the viral receptor activity of mCEACAM1a, whereas substituting the reverse changes from mCEACAM1a into mCEACAM1b increased the viral receptor activity of mCEACAM1b. These results elucidate the detailed molecular mechanism for how mice may have kept pace in the evolutionary arms race with MHV by undergoing structural and residue changes in the MHV receptor, providing insight into this possible example of pathogen-driven evolution of a host receptor protein. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2017-02-10 2016-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5313091/ /pubmed/28035001 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.764266 Text en © 2017 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Peng, Guiqing
Yang, Yang
Pasquarella, Joseph R.
Xu, Liqing
Qian, Zhaohui
Holmes, Kathryn V.
Li, Fang
Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor
title Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor
title_full Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor
title_fullStr Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor
title_full_unstemmed Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor
title_short Structural and Molecular Evidence Suggesting Coronavirus-driven Evolution of Mouse Receptor
title_sort structural and molecular evidence suggesting coronavirus-driven evolution of mouse receptor
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5313091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28035001
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.764266
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