๐ Retargeting of coronavirus by substitution of the spike glycoprotein ectodomain: Crossing the host cell species barrier
Coronaviruses generally have a narrow host range, infecting one or just a few species. Using targeted RNA recombination, we constructed a mutant of the coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) in which the ectodomain of the spike glycoprotein (S) was replaced with the highly divergent ectodomain of the S protein of feline infectious peritonitis virus. The resulting chimeric virus, designated fMHV, acquired the ability to infect feline cells and simultaneously lost the ability to infect murine cells in tissue culture. This reciprocal switch of species specificity strongly supports the notion that coronavirus host cell range is determined primarily at the level of interactions between the S protein and the virus receptor. The isolation of fMHV allowed the localization of the region responsible for S protein incorporation into virions to the carboxyterminal 64 of the 1,324 residues of this protein. This establishes a basis for further definition of elements involved in virion assembly. In addition, fMHV is potentially the ideal recipient virus for carrying out reverse genetics of MHV by targeted RNA recombination, since it presents the possibility of selecting recombinants, no matter how defective, that have regained the ability to replicate in murine cells.
keywords
๐ tissue culture (67)
๐ reverse genetics (49)
๐ hepatitis virus (437)
๐ coronavirus mouse (66)
๐ host cell (262)
๐ infectious peritonitis (181)
๐ mouse hepatitis (371)
๐ peritonitis virus (67)
๐ feline infectious (145)
๐ spike glycoprotein (99)
author
๐ค Kuo, Lili
๐ค Godeke, Gert Jan
๐ค Raamsman, Martin J.B.
๐ค Masters, Paul S.
๐ค Rottier, Peter J.M.
year
โฐ 2000
journal
๐ Journal of Virology
issn
๐ 0022538X
volume
74
number
3
page
1393-1406
citedbycount
241
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