Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Viruses bind to specific cellular receptors in order to infect their hosts. The specific receptors a virus uses are important factors in determining host range, cellular tropism, and pathogenesis. For adenovirus, the existing model o...

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Main Authors: McCormick Frank, Lyle Cynthia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-07-01
Series:Virology Journal
Online Access:http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/148
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spelling doaj-d14663d75bce499b83bcecf36dd2bb462020-11-25T01:00:11ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2010-07-017114810.1186/1743-422X-7-148Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cellsMcCormick FrankLyle Cynthia<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Viruses bind to specific cellular receptors in order to infect their hosts. The specific receptors a virus uses are important factors in determining host range, cellular tropism, and pathogenesis. For adenovirus, the existing model of entry requires two receptor interactions. First, the viral fiber protein binds Coxsackie and Adenovirus Receptor (CAR), its primary cellular receptor, which docks the virus to the cell surface. Next, viral penton base engages cellular integrins, coreceptors thought to be required exclusively for internalization and not contributing to binding. However, a number of studies reporting data which conflicts with this simple model have been published. These observations have led us to question the proposed two-step model for adenovirus infection.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this study we report that cells which express little to no CAR can be efficiently transduced by adenovirus. Using competition experiments between whole virus and soluble viral fiber protein or integrin blocking peptides, we show virus binding is not dependent on fiber binding to cells but rather on penton base binding cellular integrins. Further, we find that binding to low CAR expressing cells is inhibited specifically by a blocking antibody to integrin αvβ5, demonstrating that in these cells integrin αvβ5 and not CAR is required for adenovirus attachment. The binding mediated by integrin αvβ5 is extremely high affinity, in the picomolar range.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our data further challenges the model of adenovirus infection in which binding to primary receptor CAR is required in order for subsequent interactions between adenovirus and integrins to initiate viral entry. In low CAR cells, binding occurs through integrin αvβ5, a receptor previously thought to be used exclusively in internalization. We show for the first time that integrin αvβ5 can be used as an alternate binding receptor.</p> http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/148
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author McCormick Frank
Lyle Cynthia
spellingShingle McCormick Frank
Lyle Cynthia
Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells
Virology Journal
author_facet McCormick Frank
Lyle Cynthia
author_sort McCormick Frank
title Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells
title_short Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells
title_full Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells
title_fullStr Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells
title_full_unstemmed Integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in CAR-negative cells
title_sort integrin αvβ5 is a primary receptor for adenovirus in car-negative cells
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2010-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Viruses bind to specific cellular receptors in order to infect their hosts. The specific receptors a virus uses are important factors in determining host range, cellular tropism, and pathogenesis. For adenovirus, the existing model of entry requires two receptor interactions. First, the viral fiber protein binds Coxsackie and Adenovirus Receptor (CAR), its primary cellular receptor, which docks the virus to the cell surface. Next, viral penton base engages cellular integrins, coreceptors thought to be required exclusively for internalization and not contributing to binding. However, a number of studies reporting data which conflicts with this simple model have been published. These observations have led us to question the proposed two-step model for adenovirus infection.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this study we report that cells which express little to no CAR can be efficiently transduced by adenovirus. Using competition experiments between whole virus and soluble viral fiber protein or integrin blocking peptides, we show virus binding is not dependent on fiber binding to cells but rather on penton base binding cellular integrins. Further, we find that binding to low CAR expressing cells is inhibited specifically by a blocking antibody to integrin αvβ5, demonstrating that in these cells integrin αvβ5 and not CAR is required for adenovirus attachment. The binding mediated by integrin αvβ5 is extremely high affinity, in the picomolar range.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our data further challenges the model of adenovirus infection in which binding to primary receptor CAR is required in order for subsequent interactions between adenovirus and integrins to initiate viral entry. In low CAR cells, binding occurs through integrin αvβ5, a receptor previously thought to be used exclusively in internalization. We show for the first time that integrin αvβ5 can be used as an alternate binding receptor.</p>
url http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/148
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AT lylecynthia integrinavb5isaprimaryreceptorforadenovirusincarnegativecells
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