๐ Receptor variation and susceptibility to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) recently spread from an animal reservoir to infect humans, causing sporadic severe and frequently fatal respiratory disease. Appropriate public health and control measures will require discovery of the zoonotic MERS coronavirus reservoirs. The relevant animal hosts are liable to be those that offer optimal MERS virus cell entry. Cell entry begins with virus spike (S) protein binding to DPP4 receptors. We constructed chimeric DPP4 receptors that have the virus-binding domains of indigenous Middle Eastern animals and assessed the activities of these receptors in supporting S protein binding and virus entry. Human, camel, and horse receptors were potent and nearly equally effective MERS virus receptors, while goat and bat receptors were considerably less effective. These patterns reflected S protein affinities for the receptors. However, even the low-affinity receptors could hypersensitize cells to infection when an S-cleaving protease(s) was present, indicating that affinity thresholds for virus entry must be considered in the context of host-cell proteolytic environments. These findings suggest that virus receptors and S protein-cleaving proteases combine in a variety of animals to offer efficient virus entry and that several Middle Eastern animals are potential reservoirs for transmitting MERS-CoV to humans. ยฉ 2014, American Society for Microbiology.
keywords
๐ syndrome coronavirus (1074)
๐ public health (392)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ findings suggest (77)
author
๐ค Barlan, Arlene
๐ค Zhao, Jincun
๐ค Sarkar, Mayukh K.
๐ค Li, Kun
๐ค McCray, Paul B.
๐ค Perlman, Stanley
๐ค Gallagher, Tom
year
โฐ 2014
journal
๐ Journal of Virology
issn
๐ 10985514 0022538X
volume
88
number
9
page
4953-4961
citedbycount
62
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