Symmetrical arrangement of positively charged residues around the 5-fold axes of SAT type foot-and-mouth disease virus enhances cell culture of field viruses

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Chitray, Melanie
Kotecha, Abhay
Nsamba, Peninah
Ren, Jingshan
Maree, Sonja
Ramulongo, Tovhowani
Paul, Guntram
Theron, Jacques
Fry, Elizabeth E.
Stuart, David I.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

Field isolates of foot-and-mouth disease viruses (FMDVs) utilize integrin-mediated cell entry but many, including Southern African Territories (SAT) viruses, are difficult to adapt to BHK- 21 cells, thus hampering large-scale propagation of vaccine antigen. However, FMDVs acquire the ability to bind to cell surface heparan sulphate proteoglycans, following serial cytolytic infections in cell culture, likely by the selection of rapidly replicating FMDV variants. In this study, fourteen SAT1 and SAT2 viruses, serially passaged in BHK-21 cells, were virulent in CHO-K1 cells and displayed enhanced affinity for heparan, as opposed to their lowpassage counterparts. Comparative sequence analysis revealed the fixation of positively charged residues clustered close to the icosahedral 5-fold axes of the virus, at amino acid positions 83–85 in the βD-βE loop and 110–112 in the βF-βG loop of VP1 upon adaptation to cultured cells. Molecular docking simulations confirmed enhanced binding of heparan sulphate to a model of the adapted SAT1 virus, with the region around VP1 arginine 112 contributing the most to binding. Using this information, eight chimeric field strain mutant viruses were constructed with additional positive charges in repeated clusters on the virion surface. Five of these bound heparan sulphate with expanded cell tropism, which should facilitate large-scale propagation. However, only positively charged residues at position 110–112 of VP1 enhanced infectivity of BHK-21 cells. The symmetrical arrangement of even a single amino acid residue in the FMD virion is a powerful strategy enabling the virus to generate novel receptor binding and alternative host-cell interactions.

Description

S1 Table. Summary of the amino acid substitutions in the outer capsid proteins of SAT1 and SAT2 viruses resulting from cytolytic passages in BHK-21 cells.
S2 Table. Virus neutralization and predicted cross-reactivity of SAT2/SAU/6/00 vaccinated cattle sera to the isolates and chimeric mutant viruses.

Keywords

Virus, BHK-21, Field isolates of foot-and-mouth disease viruses (FMDVs), Southern African territories (SAT)

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Chitray M, Kotecha A, Nsamba P, Ren J, Maree S, Ramulongo T, et al. (2020) Symmetrical arrangement of positively charged residues around the 5-fold axes of SAT type foot-and-mouth disease virus enhances cell culture of field viruses. PLoS Pathog 16(9): e1008828. https://DOI.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008828.