1. Dengue virus type 2 recognizes the carbohydrate moiety of neutral glycosphingolipids in mammalian and mosquito cells
- Author
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Butsaya Thaisomboonsuk, Sukathida Ubol, Wipawee Jampangern, Songsak Petmitr, Sineewanlaya Wichit, Yasuo Suzuki, Takashi Suzuki, Kazuya I.P.J. Hidari, Koichi Morita, Akanitt Jittmittraphap, Chie Aoki, and Saki Itonori
- Subjects
Host cell surface ,Immunology ,Biology ,Dengue virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Microbiology ,Virology ,Virus ,Dengue fever ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,Residue (chemistry) ,Cell culture ,medicine ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Receptor ,K562 cells - Abstract
Dengue viruses infect cells by attaching to a surface receptor which remains unknown. The putative receptor molecules of dengue virus type 2 on the surface of mosquito (AP-61) and mammalian (LLC-MK2) cell lines were investigated. The immunochemical detection and structural analysis of carbohydrates demonstrated that the neutral glycosphingolipids, L-3 (GlcNAcβ1-3Manβ1-4Glcβ1-1'Cer) in AP-61 cells, and nLc(4) Cer (Galβ1-4GlcNAcβ1-3Galβ1-4Glcβ1-1'Cer) in LLC-MK2 cells were recognized by the virus. These findings strongly suggest that neutral glycosphingolipids share the key determinant for virus binding and that the β-GlcNAc residue may play an important role in dengue virus binding to the host cell surface.
- Published
- 2011
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