π Different host cell proteases activate the SARS-coronavirus spike-protein for cell-cell and virus-cell fusion
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) poses a considerable threat to human health. Activation of the viral spike (S)-protein by host cell proteases is essential for viral infectivity. However, the cleavage sites in SARS-S and the protease(s) activating SARS-S are incompletely defined. We found that R667 was dispensable for SARS-S-driven virus-cell fusion and for SARS-S-activation by trypsin and cathepsin L in a virus-virus fusion assay. Mutation T760R, which optimizes the minimal furin consensus motif 758-RXXR-762, and furin overexpression augmented SARS-S activity, but did not result in detectable SARS-S cleavage. Finally, SARS-S-driven cell-cell fusion was independent of cathepsin L, a protease essential for virus-cell fusion. Instead, a so far unknown leupeptin-sensitive host cell protease activated cellular SARS-S for fusion with target cells expressing high levels of ACE2. Thus, different host cell proteases activate SARS-S for virus-cell and cell-cell fusion and SARS-S cleavage at R667 and 758-RXXR-762 can be dispensable for SARS-S activation. Β© 2011 Elsevier Inc.
keywords
π syndrome coronavirus (1074)
π cell-cell fusion (34)
π cells expressing (60)
π cleavage site (85)
π host cell (262)
π respiratory syndrome (2004)
π acute respiratory (1734)
author
π€ Simmons, Graham
π€ Bertram, Stephanie
π€ Glowacka, Ilona
π€ Steffen, Imke
π€ Chaipan, Chawaree
π€ Agudelo, Juliet
π€ Lu, Kai
π€ Rennekamp, Andrew J.
π€ Hofmann, Heike
π€ Bates, Paul
π€ PΓΆhlmann, Stefan
year
β° 2011
journal
π Virology
issn
π 00426822 10960341
volume
413
number
2
page
265-274
citedbycount
31
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