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J. Virol., 08 1997, 5997-6002, Vol 71, No. 8
M Yi, S Kaneko, DY Yu and S Murakami
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has two envelope proteins, E1 and E2, which form a
heterooligomer. During dissection of interacting regions of HCV E1 and E2,
we found the presence of an interfering compound or compounds in skim milk.
Here we report that human as well as bovine lactoferrin, a multifunctional
immunomodulator, binds two HCV envelope proteins. As determined by
far-Western blotting, the bacterially expressed E1 and E2 could bind
lactoferrin in human milk directly separated or immunopurified and
separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
The bindings of lactoferrin and HCV envelope proteins in vitro were
confirmed by another method, the pull- down assay, with immunoprecipitated
lactoferrin-bound protein A resin. By the same assay, mammal-expressed
recombinant E1 and E2 were also demonstrated to bind human lactoferrin
efficiently in vitro. Direct interaction between E2 and lactoferrin was
proved in vivo, since anti- human lactoferrin antibody efficiently
coimmunoprecipitated with secreted and intracellular forms of the E2
protein, but not glutathione S-transferase (GST), from lysates of HepG2
cells transiently cotransfected with the expression plasmids of human
lactoferrin and gE2t-GST (the N-terminal two-thirds of E2 fused to GST) or
GST. The N- terminal loop of lactoferrin, the region important for the
antibacterial activity, has only a little role in the binding ability to
HCV E2 but affected the secretion or stability of lactoferrin. Taken
together, these results indicate the specific interaction between
lactoferrin and HCV envelope proteins in vivo and in vitro.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Hepatitis C virus envelope proteins bind lactoferrin
Department of Molecular Biology, Medical School, Kanazawa University, Takara-Machi, Japan.
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