Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, January 2003, p. 405-415, Vol. 77, No. 1
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.1.405-415.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departments of Molecular Virology and Microbiology,1 Medicine,2 Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 770303
Received 5 July 2002/ Accepted 24 September 2002
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
NV is the prototype nonenveloped, positive-stranded RNA human virus in the genus Norovirus of the family Caliciviridae. Noroviruses are a major cause of acute gastroenteritis throughout the world and cause virtually all outbreaks of nonbacterial gastroenteritis in adults in the United States (18, 39). Furthermore, there are an increasing number of reports of gastroenteritis cases and outbreaks in children and the elderly caused by noroviruses, in part due to increased surveillance and better detection methods (15, 26, 39).
NV virions are detected in low numbers in infected stool. The virions are 27 to 38 nm in diameter, including 4.5-nm radial protrusions extending from the capsid shell that create the calix, or cup-like structures, apparent by electron microscopy (33, 44). The NV capsid proteins (open reading frames 2 and 3, which produce the structural viral proteins VP1 and VP2, respectively) spontaneously self-assemble into virus-like particles (VLPs) when synthesized in a recombinant baculovirus expression system. These recombinant NV VLPs (rNV VLPs) are structurally and antigenically similar to the capsids of native NV and are useful in modeling virus-cell interactions (27, 53).
Hemagglutination (HA) is one method that has been helpful in identifying cell-binding receptors for many viruses, such as influenza A virus and parvovirus B19 (7, 45). The VLPs from human parvovirus B19, JC human polyomavirus, and SA11 simian rotavirus have HA properties that are similar to those of their virions (8, 14, 42).
This is the first report of HA by VLPs from a human calicivirus. Our data demonstrate that the H type 2 histo-blood group antigen is the rNV VLP HA receptor on human type O red blood cells (RBCs) and that the rNV VLPs also bind to synthetic H and structurally related Lewis carbohydrate antigens.
|
|
|---|
HA assay. The HA assay methods were based on those described by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (9). Whole blood was collected in 2 volumes of Alsever's solution (2.05% [wt/vol] glucose [Sigma], 0.8% sodium citrate [Fisher, Fair Lawn, N.J.], 0.055% citric acid [Fisher], 0.42% NaCl [Fisher], pH 6.1) and stored at 4°C. Individual human RBC samples were graciously provided by volunteer donors at the Baylor College of Medicine's Influenza Research Center and the Methodist Hospital Blood Donor Center (Houston, Tex.). Pooled human RBC reagents from at least five donors were purchased from Immucor (Atlanta, Ga.). Human cord RBC samples were kindly provided by the Children's Nutrition Research Center's Leukocyte Biology Laboratory (Houston, Tex.). Human RBC samples with rare phenotypes were generously donated by Immucor/Gamma Biologicals (Houston, Tex.). Chimpanzee, baboon, spider monkey, and rhesus RBC samples were graciously provided by the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research (San Antonio, Tex.). Chicken, guinea pig, canine, and feline blood samples were provided by the Center for Comparative Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine (Houston, Tex.). Murine RBC samples were obtained during routine blood draws from normal control BALB/c mice. Bovine, porcine, and lapine blood samples were purchased from Lampire (Pipersville, Pa.). The RBCs were packed by diluting the cells in 0.01 M PBS (without Ca2+ or Mg2+; pH 7.2) (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) and centrifuging for 15 min at 500 x g. The HA activity of rNV VLPs was tested in untreated 96-well V-bottom plates (Nunc, Naperville, Ill.). Equal volumes (50 µl each) of 0.5% packed human RBCs in 0.85% saline (pH 6.2) and rNV VLPs serially diluted in 0.01 M PBS for HA (PBS-H) (0.01 M sodium phosphate [EM Science, Gibbstown, N.J.], 0.15 M NaCl, pH 5.5; filtered with a 0.2-µm-pore-size filter) were combined at 4°C. The plates were covered with adhesive film (Excel Scientific, Wrightwood, Calif.) and incubated for 75 to 120 min in a cold room (at 4 to 8°C), unless otherwise indicated. Incubations at other temperatures were performed at room temperature (22 to 25°C) or in a tissue culture incubator (36 to 37°C). The HA titer was the reciprocal of the greatest rNV VLP dilution that did not allow sedimentation of the RBCs compared to negative control wells that contained only buffer. The positive control for HA was an influenza A virus (H1N1, A/Texas/36/91), grown in eggs, for which the titer had been previously determined. For each animal RBC sample, the percentage of packed RBCs in saline used for each HA assay was determined by the minimum concentration of RBCs able to sediment in negative control wells (PBS-H) within 6 h of incubation at 4°C.
Periodate treatment of RBCs. Human type O RBCs were treated with freshly prepared 10.0 mM KIO4 (Sigma) for 20 min at room temperature and then rinsed and packed as described above. To test the RBCs' ability to be agglutinated, 40 µl of treated or control 2.0% RBCs was mixed with 10 µl of rNV VLPs (0.1 mg/ml), anti-D or anti-H monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) (Immucor) (0.1 mg/ml), or PBS-H on an ice-cold glass plate and incubated for 10 min at 4°C. The degree of HA was determined by visual comparison to controls and verified by an independent observer.
Enzyme treatment of RBCs. All enzyme reactions were performed with 50 µl of packed RBCs in a total enzyme reaction volume of 125 µl. Control reaction mixtures were incubated without enzyme. Neuraminidase from Arthrobacter ureafaciens (6 µU; Sigma) in Dulbecco's PBS (D-PBS) (Invitrogen) was combined with the RBCs and incubated for 60 min at 37°C. L-(Toslylamido-2-phenyl)ethyl chloromethyl ketone-treated trypsin (1.25 ng; Sigma) in D-PBS was added to the RBCs and incubated for 30 min at 37°C. Trypsin activity was stopped by adding 0.5 µg of soybean trypsin inhibitor (Sigma) to the reaction mixture. After enzyme treatment, the RBCs were rinsed three times with 6 ml of PBS and packed by centrifugation as described above. After removal of the PBS supernatant, the packed RBCs were diluted with cold 0.85% saline (pH 6.2) to make a 0.5% RBC suspension for HA assays.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-based carbohydrate microtiter plate assay (CMA). Multivalent carbohydrate-biotin reagents conjugated to polyacrylamide (CHO-PAA-biotin; Glycotech, Rockville, Md.) were immobilized onto streptavidin-coated plates as suggested by the manufacturer, with all reagents added in volumes of 100 µl/well, unless otherwise specified. Briefly, PVC microtiter flat-bottom plates (Dynex Technologies, Chantilly, Va.) were coated with 10 µg of streptavidin (Sigma) per ml in PBS at 4°C overnight, blocked by addition of 1% fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin (faf-BSA) (Sigma) in PBS at room temperature for 4 h, and then rinsed three times with 200 µl of PBS per well. Next, 0.1 µg of biotin per ml or 10 µg of CHO-PAA-biotin conjugate per ml in PBS with 0.25% faf-BSA was incubated at room temperature for 1 h and rinsed as described above. The rNV VLP-carbohydrate binding was optimized at 10 µg of rNV VLPs per ml in PBS (pH 7.5) with 0.25% faf-BSA and incubation at room temperature for 1 h before rinsing as described above. rNV VLPs bound to carbohydrate were detected by incubation with rabbit anti-rNV VLP serum (1:5,000) in PBS with 0.25% faf-BSA for 1 h at room temperature; rinsing as described above; addition of goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin A (IgA), IgM, and IgG conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (ICN Biomedicals, Philadelphia, Pa.) (1:50,000) in PBS with 0.25% faf-BSA; incubation for 1 h at room temperature; and rinsing. Plates were developed with the TMB microwell peroxidase endpoint assay (Kirkegaard & Perry Laboratories, Gaithersburg, Md.), and absorbance was read at 450 nm (Spectromax 190; Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, Calif.). Carbohydrate competition assays for rNV VLP binding to the microtiter plate-immobilized CHO-PAA-biotin were performed by preincubating the rNV VLPs with CHO-PAA reagents (without biotin) in PBS (pH 7.2) for 30 min at 4°C before addition to the microtiter plates prepared as described above. The plates were incubated for 1 h at 4°C and then rinsed and detected as described above.
HI assay. Inhibition of rNV VLP HA was examined by using the multivalent CHO-PAA-biotin conjugates, human pre- and post-NV challenge sera (24), mouse hyperimmune serum IgG, and anti-rNV VLP MAbs (8812, 3901, and 3912) (30). The human sera were heat inactivated and kaolin treated for the HA inhibition (HI) assays as previously described (9). Mouse IgG from hyperimmune sera and monoclonal hybridoma ascites were purified by using UltraLink protein G columns (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.) according to the manufacturer's protocol and stored at 4°C in PBS with 0.02% NaN3. The HI activities of the carbohydrate conjugates, the treated human sera, and the mouse IgG were tested by serial dilutions of the inhibitors (starting concentrations of 100 µg/ml, 1:10, and 50 µg/ml, respectively) in a volume of 25 µl of PBS-H across 96-well V-bottom plates. An amount of rNV VLPs equal to 4 HA units (HAU) (1 HAU was defined as the amount of antigen present at the HA endpoint dilution) in a volume of 25 µl of PBS-H was added to each well, and the inhibitor was incubated with the rNV VLPs for 30 min at 4°C. (For the mouse IgG HI assays, the PBS-H contained 0.3% BSA fraction V [Calbiochem, San Diego, Calif.].) Next, 50 µl of 0.5% human type O RBCs in 0.85% saline was added to each well, and the plate was incubated as described above. Each inhibitor tested was negative for nonspecific HA of the RBCs at the highest concentration used in the assay. The HI titer was read as the last dilution of inhibitor that prevented HA of the RBCs by rNV VLPs.
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (13K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. HA titers of human type O RBCs by rNV VLPs. Fifty microliters of rNV VLPs (400 ng/ml) ( ), influenza A/TX/36/91 virus grown in eggs ( ), or PBS-H ( ) was serially diluted in PBS-H and mixed with 50 µl of 0.5% RBCs. (A) The PBS-H was at pH 7.2, and the HA assay incubation times, as determined by sedimentation of RBCs in negative control wells, were 30 min at 37°C, 40 min at 25°C, and 90 min at 4°C. (B) The pH of the PBS-H ranged from 5.0 to 8.0 as indicated, and the HA assay incubation time was 90 min at 4°C.
|
![]() View larger version (21K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. HA titers of individual RBC samples by rNV VLPs. Fifty microliters of rNV VLPs (400 ng/ml) serially diluted in PBS-H (pH 5.5) were combined with 50 µl of RBC samples (0.5 to 2.0%) from the indicated 12 animal species (A) and adult human RBC samples (0.5%) (separated by their ABO phenotypes) (B). The RBC concentrations used in HA assays were determined by sedimentation of RBCs in PBS-H (pH 5.5) negative control wells.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. HA titers of untreated and neuraminidase-treated pooled human RBCs by rNV VLPs
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Agglutination of periodate-treated human type O+ RBCs by rNV VLPs
|
-2,3 and
-2,6 linked sialic acid residues on the cell surface. This neuraminidase treatment of pooled human type O, A1, and A2 RBCs did not affect their rNV VLP HA titer (Table 1), whereas the sialic acid-dependent HA by rhesus rotavirus was lost. Thus, rNV VLP HA of human type O, A1, and A2 RBCs was sialic acid independent. Additionally, pretreating the rNV VLPs with heparan sulfate before performing the HA assay did not inhibit the VLPs' ability to hemagglutinate human type O RBCs (data not shown). Therefore, the rNV VLP binding was dependent upon a carbohydrate, and unlike many other viruses, this carbohydrate did not involve sialic acid or heparan sulfate. An interesting observation was made when the pooled human type B RBCs were treated with neuraminidase and tested for rNV VLP HA (Table 1). As seen with the majority of individual type B RBC samples, the untreated pooled type B RBCs were not hemagglutinated by 400 ng of rNV VLPs per ml. However, after neuraminidase treatment, when the sialic acid-dependent rotavirus HA titer was abolished, the rNV VLPs were able to hemagglutinate the type B RBCs.
The rNV VLP HA is dependent upon H antigen. Individuals with the rare Bombay (Oh) blood type do not express the H histo-blood group antigen on their RBCs (35). Since the H antigen is the precursor substrate for A and B antigen expression, RBCs from Bombay-type individuals will appear to have an O phenotype regardless of their ABO genotype (35). Bombay-type individuals with an A or B and a secretor (Se+) genotype are A- or B-para-Bombay, respectively, where the A or B antigens may be expressed on additional carbohydrate substrates not normally expressed by RBCs (35). None of the five Bombay- or the two para-Bombay-type RBC samples assayed was hemagglutinated by 400 ng of rNV VLPs per ml (Fig. 3A). In fact, even 100 µg of rNV VLPs per ml did not hemagglutinate the seven Bombay-type RBC samples (data not shown). Furthermore, when monoclonal antibody BRIC 231 (Biogenesis, Poole, United Kingdom), which specifically recognizes the H type 2 antigen, was preincubated with human type O RBCs, the rNV VLPs did not hemagglutinate the RBCs (data not shown). These data strongly suggest that rNV VLP HA is dependent upon H antigen expression on human RBCs.
![]() View larger version (13K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. HA titers of rare-phenotype human RBC samples (A) and human umbilical cord blood samples (B) by rNV VLPs. Fifty microliters of rNV VLPs (400 ng/ml) ( ) or UEA-1 lectin (100 µg/ml) ( ) was serially diluted in PBS-H (pH 5.5) and combined with 50 µl of 0.5% unbranched (i/i), Bombay (Oh), para-Bombay (AOh and BOh), or normal adult type O RBC samples (A) and with 50 µl of 0.5% umbilical cord RBCs in (B).
|
One developmental change in human RBC antigens is the increase in carbohydrate branching. Fetal RBCs have no branched carbohydrates (phenotype i), and adult levels of branching are attained by 2 years of age (phenotype I) (20, 52). RBCs from adults lacking the
-1,6 galactosyltransferase carbohydrate branching enzyme resemble fetal RBCs in their lack of branched-carbohydrate expression (4). The rNV VLP HA did not depend on expression of branched carbohydrates (Fig. 3A). Two type O (i/i) RBC samples were hemagglutinated by 400 ng of rNV VLPs per ml to an HA titer of 128, similar to the HA titer of normal type O RBCs.
rNV VLP HA of human type O RBCs is inhibited by mouse MAb 8812. The previously characterized rNV VLP-specific MAbs 8812, 3901, and 3912 were tested for their ability to inhibit rNV VLP HA (30). Also, IgG purified from mouse anti-rNV VLP hyperimmune serum was tested for rNV VLP HI. Only MAb 8812 inhibited rNV VLP HA of human type O RBCs (Table 3).
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. HI titers of mouse anti-rNV VLP antibodies
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 4. HI titers of preimmune and convalescent-phase sera from volunteers given NVa
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 5. Structures of carbohydrates and rNV VLP binding
|
![]() View larger version (14K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. rNV VLPs bind synthetic H and Lewis antigens. (A) Carbohydrate binding of rNV VLPs to synthetic H and Lewis antigens determined by ELISA-CMA. Multivalent CHO-PAA-biotin reagents were immobilized on microtiter plate wells and incubated with rNV VLPs in PBS (pH 7.0) at 25°C for 1 h. Bound rNV VLPs were detected with anti-rNV-specific rabbit serum, horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody, TMB colorimetric development, and spectrophotometric absorption at 450 nm. Error bars indicate standard deviations. (B) HI titers of serially diluted multivalent CHO-PAA-biotin reagent (0.10 mg/ml) with 4 HAU of rNV VLPs and 50 µl of 0.5% human type O RBCs.
|
![]() View larger version (15K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. Synthetic Led (H type 1) and H type 2 compete for binding rNV VLPs. Multivalent Led (H type 1), H type 2, or Lea carbohydrates (CHO-PAA reagents) were preincubated with rNV VLPs in PBS (pH 7.0) for 30 min at 4°C. Carbohydrate and VLP mixtures were added to microtiter plate wells containing immobilized Led, H type 2, or Lea (CHO-PAA-biotin reagents) and incubated for 1 h at 4°C. The rNV VLPs bound to the immobilized carbohydrates were detected with anti-rNV-specific rabbit serum, horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody, TMB colorimetric development, and spectrophotometric absorption at 450 nm. Error bars indicate standard deviations.
|
|
|
|---|
Carbohydrates function as receptors or essential attachment factors for influenza and measles viruses, bacteria, and parasites (reviewed in reference 40). Detection of virus-binding carbohydrates on host cell and RBC surfaces can lead to the identification of cellular receptors required for infection. Many viruses that bind carbohydrates interact with or require negatively charged sialic acids or heparan sulfates (36). Although rNV VLP binding was determined to be carbohydrate dependent, based on the loss of RBC binding after periodate treatment, neuraminidase treatment of type A and O RBCs had no effect on their HA, and heparan sulfate did not inhibit HA. Therefore, sialic acids and heparan sulfates are not required by the receptor(s) for rNV VLP HA.
NV causes symptomatic infection in most humans and has a very limited host range (24, 43). Although chimpanzees do not develop symptomatic NV disease, some NV-challenged chimpanzees are infected because they produce NV-specific seroresponses and shed NV antigen (54). The rNV VLP HA of most human and chimpanzee RBCs could reflect the ability of the individual or animal to express the NV ligand(s). For instance, the susceptibility of an animal species to influenza A virus strains is reflected in the RBC binding specificity (13, 45).
Numerous NV volunteer challenge studies indicate that some individuals are not susceptible to NV infection (24, 43). The lack of rNV VLP HA for most type B RBCs indicates that a moiety involved in determining an individual's ABO phenotype may be important for VLP-cell interaction. However, the data showing that all type O, A, and AB but few type B RBC samples were hemagglutinated by 400 ng of rNV VLPs per ml were initially puzzling. The ABO phenotypes of human RBCs are determined by the presence or absence of A and/or B carbohydrate antigens on the surface of their RBCs (29). The minimum structure defining the A and B antigens are trisaccharide moieties synthesized by enzymatic transfer of an N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) or a galactose (Gal) residue, respectively, in
-1,3 linkage to the terminal Gal residue of H antigens on glycolipids and glycoproteins (29, 55). The presence or absence of functional enzymes to synthesize the A and/or B antigens determines a person's ABO phenotype.
Since both the A and B glycotransferases add a carbohydrate residue to the same site, the absence of rNV VLP HA with type B RBCs is not easily explained by its terminal Gal residue blocking binding. However, the rNV VLPs gained the ability to hemagglutinate type B RBCs after neuraminidase treatment. This suggests that the rNV VLPs bind to an epitope on type B RBCs that may have been made accessible after removal of sialic acid from the cell surface and that a sialic acid-dependent interaction unique to the type B RBCs may block rNV VLP binding. Other protein-carbohydrate interactions have a similar sialic acid-dependent cryptic nature, including an antibody that recognizes the B antigen (50, 52). Alternately, the rNV VLP HA of type B RBCs may be a weak interaction that is detectable only after the loss of net negative charge on neuraminidase-treated RBCs. The reduced negative charge decreases cell-cell repulsion and thus enhances weak binding interactions (48). The HA of six additional individual human type B RBC samples by high concentrations of rNV VLPs can be interpreted as evidence for a weaker binding of the rNV VLPs to the type B RBCs. This weaker binding of the type B RBCs would not be primarily due to a reduction in potential binding sites, since
-galactosidase treatment of pooled type B RBCs to remove the terminal
-Gal residues, which converts B antigens to H antigens, also increased the HA titer (unpublished data). Thus, one possible explanation for the four human type B RBC samples that were hemagglutinated by 400 ng of rNV VLPs per ml is that these type B RBCs expressed less sialic acid. Alternatively, some B allele galactosyltransferases are less processive, leading to less H to B antigen conversion, which could lead to more H antigen being found on these type B RBCs (55).
This study shows that the H antigen is the HA receptor for rNV VLPs on human type O RBCs. None of the seven Bombay-type RBCs, which lack expression of the H antigen, were hemagglutinated by the rNV VLPs. Furthermore, preincubating the human type O RBCs with an antibody against H type 2 inhibited rNV VLP HA, and preincubating rNV VLPs with synthetic H antigen inhibited HA of human type O RBCs. H antigen is also expressed on chimpanzee RBCs but is not expressed on the RBCs of other species tested for rNV VLP HA (6). Thus, rNV VLP HA and H antigen expression on the RBCs are in agreement. Furthermore, ABH antigens are developmentally regulated (20), with little to no expression on fetal RBCs and expression increasing to adult levels after birth (37). Thus, the lack of rNV VLP HA of one type A umbilical cord RBC sample and one type O umbilical cord RBC sample is congruent with the developmental expression of ABH antigens. Another developmental change in carbohydrate structure that can affect lectin HA is branching (22). The fetal unbranched structure (type i) changes to an adult branched structure (type I) by developmentally regulated enzyme expression (4, 51). The rNV VLP HA of unbranched type i RBCs demonstrates that a branched carbohydrate structure is not required for rNV VLP HA. Without a cell culture system, the biological relevance of rNV VLP HA cannot be directly determined. However, the binding of other biologically relevant protein-carbohydrate pairs is also dependent on low temperature, such as the galactophillic Pseudomonas aeruginosa lectin PA-IL and the human cold agglutinating antibodies to I antigen (21, 22). The low-temperature dependence of rNV VLP-H type 2 antigen binding could reflect an enhanced affinity due to the stabilization of a VLP and/or carbohydrate conformation that promotes binding.
H type 2 is the only H antigen normally expressed on human RBCs (Table 5) (reviewed in reference 29). Our data indicate that H type 2 is the rNV VLP HA receptor on human type O RBCs. Another distantly related virus, rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV), is the only other calicivirus VLP (and the only calicivirus virion) known to hemagglutinate human RBCs (46). Interestingly, H type 2 is the HA receptor for RHDV VLPs on human RBCs (47). Thus, the fact that RHDV VLPs bind to a carbohydrate expressed on mucosal cells of rabbits, humans, and other animals suggests that H type 2 antigen binding may be an initial step in calicivirus-host interaction, but without evidence for RHDV infection in humans, an additional host-restrictive step(s) must be necessary for productive RHDV infection. Unlike RHDV, feline calicivirus, and porcine enteric calicivirus, NV is not known to be a systemic pathogen (28, 34, 41). To date, all reports indicate that NV replication and pathogenesis are restricted to the gut, and NV has not been found in sera from infected humans. However, because of rNV VLP binding to RBCs, the possibility of systemic spread of NV should be reevaluated with more sensitive diagnostic tests.
The H type 2 antigen not only is found on RBCs but also is expressed on human enterocytes, mainly on glycoproteins (19). Many structurally related H and Lewis carbohydrate antigens, besides H type 2, are expressed in the gut and not on RBCs (23, 25). The H and Lewis antigens are highly expressed in the proximal small intestine, including the duodenal-jejunal junction, a site of NV-associated histopathology as seen in biopsies from NV-challenged volunteers (43).
A recent study demonstrated that the rNV VLPs bind to histo-blood group antigens present on gastrointestinal sections of secretor, but not nonsecretor, individuals (38). Our data show that in the ELISA-based carbohydrate microtiter plate assays the rNV VLPs bind to the following synthetic H and Lewis carbohydrates (greatest to least rNV VLP binding): Led (H type 1), Leb, H type 2, Ley, and H disaccharide. Our results showing rNV VLP binding to Leb differ from the data reported by Marionneau et al. (38). However, in subsequent assays this group also found that rNV VLPs bind to Leb (J. Le Pendu, personal communication). In the ELISA-based carbohydrate microtiter plate assay, the rNV VLPs were detected bound to the H type 2 reagents at room temperature and at 37°C in addition to 4°C, the temperature required for HA. This binding at increased temperature is probably due to differences in presentation of a single synthetic carbohydrate in the microtiter plate well versus in a heterogeneous carbohydrate population on RBCs. On enterocytes, the presence of the H and Lewis carbohydrates is dependent upon expression of specific glycotransferases (reviewed in reference 31). The expression of these enzymes depends on an individual's genetics and development, on tissue-specific patterns of expression, and on cellular differentiation (25, 31). The Lewis and H type 2 antigens are very similar terminal tri- and tetrasaccharides made by slight variations in linkages of the same three carbohydrate residues (Table 5). These antigens differ in their linkage between residues and/or in the presence of one or more fucose residues. For instance, Led (H type 1) differs from Leb by the absence of a second fucose on GalNAc (31). This suggests that the penultimate fucose residue found in Leb (and Ley) only slightly decreases rNV VLP binding compared to Led (and H type 2). The Led and Leb antigens are expressed on the surface of mucosal epithelial cells and in the mucous secretions of secretor individuals, who comprise approximately 80% of European-Americans. The nonsecretors do not express Led and Leb, and they may express Lea and Lex instead (5, 31). Since rNV VLPs bind Led and Leb, but not Lea and Lex, if NV infection is in part dependent upon specific Lewis antigen binding, as predicted by Marionneau et al., the secretor individuals may be more susceptible to NV infection, and nonsecretors may be less susceptible (38). However, there may be other factors that would make individuals resistant to NV challenge, such as previous infections with a homologous norovirus or the individuals' ABO phenotypes (32, 49).
The H type 3 antigen has also been reported to bind rNV VLPs (see structure in Table 5) (38). Our results support these data, based on the following observations. The GalNAc of the A type 2 antigen may be used as a substrate for synthesis of an H type 3 antigen (10, 11). Thus, there may be more H antigens available for rNV VLP binding to type A RBCs than to type O RBCs. In our HA assays, the rNV VLP HA titers for type A RBCs were consistently greater than or equal to those for type O RBCs. H type 3 may be an additional rNV VLP HA receptor on type A RBCs, but it is not required because it is not found on type O or desialylated type B RBCs.
Since several structurally related carbohydrate antigens bind to the rNV VLPs, it follows that these carbohydrates may interact at a common site on the rNV VLPs. The competitive inhibition experiments with synthetic carbohydrates indicate that free Led (H type 1) and H type 2 are able to inhibit rNV VLPs binding to both homologous and heterologous immobilized Led and H type 2 carbohydrates. These results suggest that Led and H type 2 bind at the same site(s) on the rNV VLPs. Structural studies of rNV VLP interactions with carbohydrates are needed to confirm these observations and to precisely locate the carbohydrate binding site(s) on the VLPs.
MAb 8812 recognizes a conformational epitope within the protruding domain on the rNV VLPs (amino acids 227 to 530) (30). This MAb inhibits both rNV VLP HA and binding to the Caco-2 human colonic adenocarcinoma cell line, which resembles small intestinal cells (53). The lack of HI by IgG purified from mouse rNV VLP hyperimmune serum suggests that MAb 8812 recognizes a nonimmunodominant epitope on rNV VLPs in immunized BALB/c mice. Additionally, the increased binding of rNV VLPs to more-differentiated Caco-2 cells agrees with increased expression of H antigens as Caco-2 cells differentiate in culture (2, 53). The identification of the carbohydrates to which rNV VLPs bind could be used to screen cells potentially permissive to NV infection. For the human parvovirus B19, identifying the P antigen as the HA receptor helped identify erythroblasts as a permissive cell for infection (7). However, for NV, expression of the H antigen on potential host cells is not sufficient for productive infection. Caco-2 cells express Led and H type 2 (2), yet these cells are not permissive to NV infection unpublished data. Nonetheless, H and Lewis antigen expression may prove to be required for or increase the efficiency of NV infection.
Without a cell culture system for NV, there is no means to directly determine if H or Lewis antigen binding plays a part in NV infection. An association between expression of the B antigen and resistance to NV infection and disease suggests that the lack of rNV VLP HA of most type B RBCs is biologically relevant (32). Indeed, the lack of symptomatic disease in any individual expressing type B antigen supports a model in which greater rNV VLP binding correlates with greater native NV binding and high virus binding is one factor contributing to severity of NV illness (32). Additionally, if the rNV VLP binding to RBCs is important in NV infection, infected individuals could develop antibodies to NV that block NV-carbohydrate binding, and an increase in rNV VLP HI titer could correlate with protection from subsequent NV challenges (17). Our examination of paired sera from NV-challenged volunteers shows that the postchallenge HI titers were greater than the prechallenge titers for the NV-infected individuals. Thus, infected individuals are able to develop NV-specific antibodies that block rNV VLP-H type 2 binding. The finding that HI titers increase in the convalescent-phase sera of NV-infected volunteers is of potential interest. With other viruses, increases in HI titer correlate with protection and/or neutralization better than increases in ELISA titer (12, 17). Currently we are retrospectively examining the relationship between pre- and postchallenge HI titers in relation to NV infection and disease. This and future studies should determine if the rNV VLP HI assay can serve as a surrogate for measuring protective immunity.
In conclusion, rNV VLP HA has proven useful in helping to identify carbohydrates as potential NV ligands that may be required for viral infection. Additional work is needed to understand norovirus-carbohydrate interactions. For instance, the specificity of carbohydrate antigen binding may be strain-specific. The VLPs from a genogroup II norovirus, Grimsby virus, did not produce the same HA profile as rNV VLPs. The recombinant Grimsby virus VLPs were able to hemagglutinate all normal human type O, A, B, and AB RBCs, and they also hemagglutinated one of the seven Bombay-type RBC samples (unpublished data). Understanding the nature of the potential initial norovirus-host cell interactions could lead to the development of antiviral agents and a greater understanding of norovirus pathogenesis.
This work was funded by grants AI-65299, AI-46581, DK-58955, and CA-09197 from the National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, Md.) and by grant DK-56338, which supports the Texas Gulf Coast Digestive Diseases Center.
|
|
|---|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»