Abstract
Many herpesviruses bind to heparan sulfate (HS). Murid herpesvirus-4 (MuHV-4) does so via its envelope glycoproteins gp70 and gH/gL. MuHV-4 gp150 further regulates an HS-independent interaction to make that HS-dependent too. Cell binding by MuHV-4 virions is consequently strongly HS-dependent. Gp70 and gH/gL show some in vitro redundancy: an antibody-mediated blockade of HS binding by one is well tolerated, whereas a blockade of both severely impairs infection. In order to understand the importance of HS binding for MuHV-4 in vivo, we generated mutants lacking both gL and gp70. As expected, gL-gp70- MuHV-4 showed very poor cell binding. It infected mice at high dose but not at low dose, indicating defective host entry. But once entry occurred, host colonization, which for MuHV-4 is relatively independent of the infection dose, was remarkably normal. The gL-gp70- entry deficit was much greater than that of gL- or gp70- single knockouts. And gp150 disruption, which allows HS-independent cell binding, largely rescued the gL-gp70- cell binding and host entry deficits. Thus, it appeared that MuHV-4 HS binding is important in vivo, principally for efficient host entry. © 2009 SGM.
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CITATION STYLE
Gillet, L., May, J. S., & Stevenson, P. G. (2009). In vivo importance of heparan sulfate-binding glycoproteins for murid herpesvirus-4 infection. Journal of General Virology, 90(3), 602–613. https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.005785-0
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