論文

基本情報

氏名 小川 寛人
氏名(カナ) オガワ ヒロヒト
氏名(英語) Ogawa Hirohito
所属 獣医学部 獣医学科
職名 准教授
researchmap研究者コード 6000004515
researchmap機関 岡山理科大学

題名

Nectin-2 Acts as a Viral Entry Mediated Molecule That Binds to Human Herpesvirus 6B Glycoprotein B

単著・共著の別

 

著者

Hirohito Ogawa
Daisuke Fujikura
Hikaru Namba
Nobuko Yamashita
Tomoyuki Honda
Masao Yamada

概要

Human herpesvirus 6B (HHV-6B) is a T-lymphotropic virus and the etiological agent of exanthem subitum. HHV-6B is present in a latent or persistent form after primary infection and is produced in the salivary glands or transmitted to this organ. Infected individuals continue to secrete the virus in their saliva, which is thus considered a source for virus transmission. HHV-6B primarily propagates in T cells because its entry receptor, CD134, is mainly expressed by activated T cells. The virus then spreads to the host’s organs, including the salivary glands, nervous system, and liver. However, CD134 expression is not detected in these organs. Therefore, HHV-6B may be entering cells via a currently unidentified cell surface molecule, but the mechanisms for this have not yet been investigated. In this study, we investigated a CD134-independent virus entry mechanism in the parotid-derived cell line HSY. First, we confirmed viral infection in CD134-membrane unanchored HSY cells. We then determined that nectin cell adhesion molecule 2 (nectin-2) mediated virus entry and that HHV-6B-insensitive T-cells transduced with nectin-2 were transformed into virus-permissive cells. We also found that virus entry was significantly reduced in nectin-2 knockout parotid-derived cells. Furthermore, we showed that HHV-6B glycoprotein B (gB) interacted with the nectin-2 V-set domain. The results suggest that nectin-2 acts as an HHV-6B entry-mediated protein.

発表雑誌等の名称

Viruses

出版者

MDPI AG

14

1

開始ページ

160

終了ページ

160

発行又は発表の年月

2022-01-16

査読の有無

有り

招待の有無

無し

記述言語

英語

掲載種別

研究論文(学術雑誌)

ISSN

 

ID:DOI

10.3390/v14010160

ID:NAID(CiNiiのID)

 

ID:PMID

 

JGlobalID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCIDのPut Code

 

DBLP ID