Functional studies of host-specific ephrin-B ligands as Henipavirus receptors

Katharine N. Bossart*, Mary Tachedjian, Jennifer A. McEachern, Gary Crameri, Zhongyu Zhu, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Christopher C. Broder, Lin Fa Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

95 Scopus citations

Abstract

Hendra virus (HeV) and Nipah virus (NiV) are closely related paramyxoviruses that infect and cause disease in a wide range of mammalian hosts. To determine whether host receptor molecules play a role in species-specific and/or virus-specific infection we have cloned and characterized ephrin-B2 and ephrin-B3 ligands from a range of species, including human, horse, pig, cat, dog, bats (Pteropus alecto and Pteropus vampyrus) and mouse. HeV and NiV were both able to infect cells expressing any of the ephrin-B2 and ephrin-B3 molecules. There did not appear to be significant differences in receptor function from different species or receptor usage by HeV and NiV. Soluble ephrin ligands, their receptors and G-specific human monoclonal antibodies differentially blocked henipavirus infections suggesting different receptor affinities, overlapping receptor binding domains of the henipavirus attachment glycoprotein (G) and that the functional domains of the ephrin ligands may be important for henipavirus binding.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)357-371
Number of pages15
JournalVirology
Volume372
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Mar 2008

Keywords

  • Ephrin receptors
  • Ephrin-B2
  • Ephrin-B3
  • Henipavirus
  • Multi-species tropism
  • Therapeutics

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