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Human Coronavirus 229E Binds to CD13 in Rafts and Enters the Cell through Caveolae

Authors :
Etsuko Suzaki
Yoshihide Ohe
Takao Senda
Katsuko Kataoka
Toyoshi Fujimoto
Asuka Kiyota
Kaoru Miyamoto
Ryuji Nomura
Source :
Journal of Virology
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2004.

Abstract

CD13, a receptor for human coronavirus 229E (HCoV-229E), was identified as a major component of the Triton X-100-resistant membrane microdomain in human fibroblasts. The incubation of living fibroblasts with an anti-CD13 antibody on ice gave punctate labeling that was evenly distributed on the cell surface, but raising the temperature to 37°C before fixation caused aggregation of the labeling. The aggregated labeling of CD13 colocalized with caveolin-1 in most cells. The HCoV-229E virus particle showed a binding and redistribution pattern that was similar to that caused by the anti-CD13 antibody: the virus bound to the cell evenly when incubated on ice but became colocalized with caveolin-1 at 37°C; importantly, the virus also caused sequestration of CD13 to the caveolin-1-positive area. Electron microscopy confirmed that HCoV-229E was localized near or at the orifice of caveolae after incubation at 37°C. The depletion of plasmalemmal cholesterol with methyl β-cyclodextrin significantly reduced the HCoV-229E redistribution and subsequent infection. A caveolin-1 knockdown by RNA interference also reduced the HCoV-229E infection considerably. The results indicate that HCoV-229E first binds to CD13 in the Triton X-100-resistant microdomain, then clusters CD13 by cross-linking, and thereby reaches the caveolar region before entering cells.

Details

ISSN :
10985514 and 0022538X
Volume :
78
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....29245fd2de1f76a94bb985c060c91742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.78.16.8701-8708.2004