In vivo importance of heparan sulfate-binding glycoproteins for murid herpesvirus-4 infection

27Citations
Citations of this article
28Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

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.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

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

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free