Regulation of paramyxovirus fusion activation: the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein stabilizes the fusion protein in a pretriggered state

M Porotto, ZW Salah, L Gui, I DeVito… - Journal of …, 2012 - Am Soc Microbiol
M Porotto, ZW Salah, L Gui, I DeVito, EM Jurgens, H Lu, CC Yokoyama, LM Palermo…
Journal of virology, 2012Am Soc Microbiol
The hemagglutinin (HA)-neuraminidase protein (HN) of paramyxoviruses carries out three
discrete activities, each of which affects the ability of HN to promote viral fusion and entry:
receptor binding, receptor cleaving (neuraminidase), and triggering of the fusion protein.
Binding of HN to its sialic acid receptor on a target cell triggers its activation of the fusion
protein (F), which then inserts into the target cell and mediates the membrane fusion that
initiates infection. We provide new evidence for a fourth function of HN: stabilization of the F …
Abstract
The hemagglutinin (HA)-neuraminidase protein (HN) of paramyxoviruses carries out three discrete activities, each of which affects the ability of HN to promote viral fusion and entry: receptor binding, receptor cleaving (neuraminidase), and triggering of the fusion protein. Binding of HN to its sialic acid receptor on a target cell triggers its activation of the fusion protein (F), which then inserts into the target cell and mediates the membrane fusion that initiates infection. We provide new evidence for a fourth function of HN: stabilization of the F protein in its pretriggered state before activation. Influenza virus hemagglutinin protein (uncleaved HA) was used as a nonspecific binding protein to tether F-expressing cells to target cells, and heat was used to activate F, indicating that the prefusion state of F can be triggered to initiate structural rearrangement and fusion by temperature. HN expression along with uncleaved HA and F enhances the F activation if HN is permitted to engage the receptor. However, if HN is prevented from engaging the receptor by the use of a small compound, temperature-induced F activation is curtailed. The results indicate that HN helps stabilize the prefusion state of F, and analysis of a stalk domain mutant HN reveals that the stalk domain of HN mediates the F-stabilization effect.
American Society for Microbiology