Identification of the alpha(6) integrin as a candidate receptor for papillomaviruses


Autoria(s): Evander, Magnus; Frazer, Ian H.; Payne, Elizabeth; Qi, Ying Mei; Hengst, Kylie; McMillan, Nigel A.J.
Data(s)

01/03/1997

Resumo

Papillomaviruses (PVs) bind in a specific and saturable fashion to a range of epithelial and other cell lines. Treatment of cells with trypsin markedly reduces their ability to bind virus particles, suggesting that binding is mediated via a cell membrane protein. We have investigated the interaction bf human PV type 6b L1 virus-like particles (VLPs) with two epithelial cell lines, CV-1 and HaCaT, which bind VLPs, and a B-cell line (DG75) previously shown not to bind VLPs. Immunoprecipitation of a mixture of PV VLPs with [S-35]methionine-labeled cell extracts and with biotin-labeled cell surface proteins identified four proteins from CV-1 and HaCaT cells of 220, 120, 87, and 35 kDa that reacted with VLPs and were not present in DG75 cells. The alpha(6) beta(4) integrin complex has subunits corresponding to the VLP precipitated proteins, and the tissue distribution of this complex suggested that it was a candidate human PV receptor. Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to the alpha(6) or beta(4) integrin subunits precipitated VLPs from a mixture of CV-1 cell proteins and VLPs, whereas MAbs to other integrin subunits did not. An alpha(6) integrin-specific MAb (GoH3) inhibited VLP binding to CV-1 and HaCaT cells, whereas an anti-beta(4) integrin MAb and a range of integrin-specific and other MAbs did not. Furthermore, human laminin, the natural ligand for the alpha(6) beta(4) integrin, was able to block VLP binding. By use of sections of monkey esophagus, the distribution of alpha(6), integrin expression in the basal epithelium was shown to coincide with the distribution of bound VLPs. Taken together, these data suggest that VLPs bind specifically to the alpha(6) integrin subunit and that integrin complexes containing alpha(6) integrin complexed with either beta(1) or beta(4) integrins may act as a receptor for PV binding and entry into epithelial cells.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57481/UQ57481_OA.pdf

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57481

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Society for Microbiology

Palavras-Chave #Virology #Virus-like Particles #Differential Expression #Vitronectin Receptor #Essential Component #Epithelial-cells #Cultured-cells #Capsid Protein #Insect Cells #Adhesion #Hemidesmosomes
Tipo

Journal Article