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Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity

Several arenaviruses cause hemorrhagic fevers in humans with high case fatality rates. A vaccine named Candid#1 is available only against Junin virus (JUNV) in Argentina. Specific N-linked glycans on the arenavirus surface glycoprotein (GP) mask important epitopes and help the virus evade antibody r...

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Autores principales: Koma, Takaaki, Huang, Cheng, Coscia, Adrian, Hallam, Steven, Manning, John T., Maruyama, Junki, Walker, Aida G., Miller, Milagros, Smith, Jeanon N., Patterson, Michael, Abraham, Jonathan, Paessler, Slobodan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7951981/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33647064
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009356
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author Koma, Takaaki
Huang, Cheng
Coscia, Adrian
Hallam, Steven
Manning, John T.
Maruyama, Junki
Walker, Aida G.
Miller, Milagros
Smith, Jeanon N.
Patterson, Michael
Abraham, Jonathan
Paessler, Slobodan
author_facet Koma, Takaaki
Huang, Cheng
Coscia, Adrian
Hallam, Steven
Manning, John T.
Maruyama, Junki
Walker, Aida G.
Miller, Milagros
Smith, Jeanon N.
Patterson, Michael
Abraham, Jonathan
Paessler, Slobodan
author_sort Koma, Takaaki
collection PubMed
description Several arenaviruses cause hemorrhagic fevers in humans with high case fatality rates. A vaccine named Candid#1 is available only against Junin virus (JUNV) in Argentina. Specific N-linked glycans on the arenavirus surface glycoprotein (GP) mask important epitopes and help the virus evade antibody responses. However the role of GPC glycans in arenavirus pathogenicity is largely unclear. In a lethal animal model of hemorrhagic fever-causing Machupo virus (MACV) infection, we found that a chimeric MACV with the ectodomain of GPC from Candid#1 vaccine was partially attenuated. Interestingly, mutations resulting in acquisition of N-linked glycans at GPC N83 and N166 frequently occurred in late stages of the infection. These glycosylation sites are conserved in the GPC of wild-type MACV, indicating that this is a phenotypic reversion for the chimeric MACV to gain those glycans crucial for infection in vivo. Further studies indicated that the GPC mutant viruses with additional glycans became more resistant to neutralizing antibodies and more virulent in animals. On the other hand, disruption of these glycosylation sites on wild-type MACV GPC rendered the virus substantially attenuated in vivo and also more susceptible to antibody neutralization, while loss of these glycans did not affect virus growth in cultured cells. We also found that MACV lacking specific GPC glycans elicited higher levels of neutralizing antibodies against wild-type MACV. Our findings revealed the critical role of specific glycans on GPC in arenavirus pathogenicity and have important implications for rational design of vaccines against this group of hemorrhagic fever-causing viruses.
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spelling pubmed-79519812021-03-22 Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity Koma, Takaaki Huang, Cheng Coscia, Adrian Hallam, Steven Manning, John T. Maruyama, Junki Walker, Aida G. Miller, Milagros Smith, Jeanon N. Patterson, Michael Abraham, Jonathan Paessler, Slobodan PLoS Pathog Research Article Several arenaviruses cause hemorrhagic fevers in humans with high case fatality rates. A vaccine named Candid#1 is available only against Junin virus (JUNV) in Argentina. Specific N-linked glycans on the arenavirus surface glycoprotein (GP) mask important epitopes and help the virus evade antibody responses. However the role of GPC glycans in arenavirus pathogenicity is largely unclear. In a lethal animal model of hemorrhagic fever-causing Machupo virus (MACV) infection, we found that a chimeric MACV with the ectodomain of GPC from Candid#1 vaccine was partially attenuated. Interestingly, mutations resulting in acquisition of N-linked glycans at GPC N83 and N166 frequently occurred in late stages of the infection. These glycosylation sites are conserved in the GPC of wild-type MACV, indicating that this is a phenotypic reversion for the chimeric MACV to gain those glycans crucial for infection in vivo. Further studies indicated that the GPC mutant viruses with additional glycans became more resistant to neutralizing antibodies and more virulent in animals. On the other hand, disruption of these glycosylation sites on wild-type MACV GPC rendered the virus substantially attenuated in vivo and also more susceptible to antibody neutralization, while loss of these glycans did not affect virus growth in cultured cells. We also found that MACV lacking specific GPC glycans elicited higher levels of neutralizing antibodies against wild-type MACV. Our findings revealed the critical role of specific glycans on GPC in arenavirus pathogenicity and have important implications for rational design of vaccines against this group of hemorrhagic fever-causing viruses. Public Library of Science 2021-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7951981/ /pubmed/33647064 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009356 Text en © 2021 Koma et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Koma, Takaaki
Huang, Cheng
Coscia, Adrian
Hallam, Steven
Manning, John T.
Maruyama, Junki
Walker, Aida G.
Miller, Milagros
Smith, Jeanon N.
Patterson, Michael
Abraham, Jonathan
Paessler, Slobodan
Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
title Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
title_full Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
title_fullStr Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
title_full_unstemmed Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
title_short Glycoprotein N-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
title_sort glycoprotein n-linked glycans play a critical role in arenavirus pathogenicity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7951981/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33647064
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009356
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