1. Academic Validation
  2. A new class of receptor for herpes simplex virus has heptad repeat motifs that are common to membrane fusion proteins

A new class of receptor for herpes simplex virus has heptad repeat motifs that are common to membrane fusion proteins

  • J Virol. 2005 Jun;79(12):7419-30. doi: 10.1128/JVI.79.12.7419-7430.2005.
Aleida Perez 1 Qing-Xue Li Pilar Perez-Romero Gregory Delassus Santiago R Lopez Sarah Sutter Ning McLaren A Oveta Fuller
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan School of Medicine, 6736 Medical Sciences II, 0620, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0620, USA.
Abstract

We isolated a human cDNA by expression cloning and characterized its gene product as a new human protein that enables entry and Infection of herpes simplex virus (HSV). The gene, designated hfl-B5, encodes a type II cell surface membrane protein, B5, that is broadly expressed in human primary tissue and cell lines. It contains a high-scoring heptad repeat at the extracellular C terminus that is predicted to form an alpha-helix for coiled coils like those in cellular SNAREs or in some viral fusion proteins. A synthetic 30-mer peptide that has the same sequence as the heptad repeat alpha-helix blocks HSV Infection of B5-expressing porcine cells and human HEp-2 cells. Transient expression of human B5 in HEp-2 cells results in increased polykarocyte formation even in the absence of Viral Proteins. The B5 protein fulfills all criteria as a receptor or coreceptor for HSV entry. Use by HSV of a human cellular receptor, such as B5, that contains putative membrane fusion domains provides an example where a pathogenic virus with broad tropism has usurped a widely expressed cellular protein to function in Infection at events that lead to membrane fusion.

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