Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Ogawa Hirohito
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 6000004515
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Receptor-Mediated Host Cell Preference of a Bat-Derived Filovirus, Lloviu Virus.

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Yoshihiro Takadate
Rashid Manzoor
Takeshi Saito
Yurie Kida
Junki Maruyama
Tatsunari Kondoh
Hiroko Miyamoto
Hirohito Ogawa
Masahiro Kajihara
Manabu Igarashi
Ayato Takada

Summary

Lloviu virus (LLOV), a bat-derived filovirus that is phylogenetically distinct from human pathogenic filoviruses such as Ebola virus (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV), was discovered in Europe. However, since infectious LLOV has never been isolated, the biological properties of this virus remain poorly understood. We found that vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) pseudotyped with the glycoprotein (GP) of LLOV (VSV-LLOV) showed higher infectivity in one bat (Miniopterus sp.)-derived cell line than in the other bat-derived cell lines tested, which was distinct from the tropism of VSV pseudotyped with EBOV (VSV-EBOV) and MARV GPs. We then focused on the interaction between GP and Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) protein, one of the cellular receptors of filoviruses. We introduced the Miniopterus bat and human NPC1 genes into NPC1-knockout Vero E6 cells and their susceptibilities to the viruses were compared. The cell line expressing the bat NPC1 showed higher susceptibility to VSV-LLOV than that expressing human NPC1, whereas the opposite preference was seen for VSV-EBOV. Using a site-directed mutagenesis approach, amino acid residues involved in the differential tropism were identified in the NPC1 and GP molecules. Our results suggest that the interaction between GP and NPC1 is an important factor in the tropism of LLOV to a particular bat species.

Magazine(name)

Microorganisms

Publisher

 

Volume

8

Number Of Pages

10

StartingPage

 

EndingPage

 

Date of Issue

2020-10-05

Referee

Exist

Invited

 

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.3390/microorganisms8101530

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID