1. Academic Validation
  2. Critical determinants of human α-defensin 5 activity against non-enveloped viruses

Critical determinants of human α-defensin 5 activity against non-enveloped viruses

  • J Biol Chem. 2012 Jul 13;287(29):24554-62. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M112.354068.
Anshu P Gounder 1 Mayim E Wiens Sarah S Wilson Wuyuan Lu Jason G Smith
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA.
Abstract

Human α-defensins, such as human α-defensin 5 (HD5), block Infection of non-enveloped viruses, including human adenoviruses (AdV), papillomaviruses (HPV), and polyomaviruses. Through mutational analysis of HD5, we have identified arginine residues that contribute to Antiviral activity against AdV and HPV. Of two arginine residues paired on one face of HD5, Arg-28 is critical for both viruses, while Arg-9 is only important for AdV. Two arginine residues on the opposite face of the molecule (Arg-13 and Arg-32) and unpaired Arg-25 are less important for both. In addition, hydrophobicity at residue 29 is a major determinant of anti-adenoviral activity, and a chemical modification that prevents HD5 self-association was strongly attenuating. Although HD5 binds to the capsid of AdV, the molecular basis for this interaction is undefined. Capsid binding by HD5 is not purely charge-dependent, as substitution of lysine for Arg-9 and Arg-28 was deleterious. Analysis of HD5 analogs that retained varying levels of potency demonstrated that anti-adenoviral activity is directly correlated with HD5 binding to the virus, confirming that the viral capsid rather than the cell is the relevant target. Also, AdV aggregation induced by HD5 binding is not sufficient for neutralization. Rather, these studies confirm that the major mechanism of HD5-mediated neutralization of AdV depends upon specific binding to the viral capsid through interactions mediated in part by critical arginine residues, hydrophobicity at residue 29, and multimerization of HD5, which increases initial binding of virus to the cell but prevents subsequent viral uncoating and genome delivery to the nucleus.

Figures
Products