Abstract

Group A rotaviruses, an important cause of severe diarrhea in children and young animals, initiate infection via interactions of the VP8* domain of the VP4 spike protein with cell surface sialic acids (SAs) or histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs). Although the bovine G6P[5] WC3 strain is an important animal pathogen and is also used in the bovine-human reassortant RotaTeq vaccine, the receptor(s) for the VP8* domain of WC3 and its reassortant strains have not yet been identified. In the present study, HBGA- and saliva-binding assays showed that both G6P[5] WC3 and mono-reassortant G4P[5] strains recognized the αGal HBGA. The infectivity of both P[5]-bearing strains was significantly reduced in αGal-free MA-104 cells by pretreatment with a broadly specific neuraminidase or by coincubation with the α2,6-linked SA-specific Sambucus nigra lectin, but not by the α2,3-linked specific sialidase or by Maackia amurensis lectin. Free NeuAc and the αGal trisaccharide also prevented the infectivity of both strains. This indicated that both P[5]-bearing strains utilize α2,6-linked SA as a ligand on MA104 cells. However, the two strains replicated in differentiated bovine small intestinal enteroids and in their human counterparts that lack α2,6-linked SA or αGal HBGA, suggesting that additional or alternative receptors such as integrins, hsp70, and tight-junction proteins bound directly to the VP5* domain can be used by the P[5]-bearing strains to initiate the infection of human cells. In addition, these data also suggested that P[5]-bearing strains have potential for cross-species transmission.IMPORTANCE Group A rotaviruses initiate infection through the binding of the VP8* domain of the VP4 protein to sialic acids (SAs) or histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs). Although the bovine G6P[5] WC3 strain is an important animal pathogen and is used as the backbone in the bovine-human reassortant RotaTeq vaccine, the receptor(s) for their P[5] VP8* domain has remained elusive. Using a variety of approaches, we demonstrated that the WC3 and bovine-human mono-reassortant G4P[5] vaccine strains recognize both α2,6-linked SA and αGal HBGA as ligands. Neither ligand is expressed on human small intestinal epithelial cells, explaining the absence of natural human infection by P[5]-bearing strains. However, we observed that the P[5]-bearing WC3 and G4P[5] RotaTeq vaccine strains could still infect human intestinal epithelial cells. Thus, the four P[5] RotaTeq vaccine strains potentially binding to additional alternative receptors may be efficient and effective in providing protection against severe rotavirus disease in human.

Highlights

  • Group A rotaviruses, an important cause of severe diarrhea in children and young animals, initiate infection via interactions of the VP8* domain of the VP4 spike protein with cell surface sialic acids (SAs) or histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs)

  • The results showed that 31 nucleotide substitutions were detected between the current WC3 and original GenBank database-deposited WC3 strains without any amino acid substitution (Fig. 1A)

  • To confirm the specific binding of both P[5]-bearing strains to the ␣Gal epitope, we examined whether the removal of ␣Gal epitope from the synthetic Gal␣3Gal␤4GlcNAc␤ HBGA by pretreatment with ␣-galactosidase (GLA) was able to reduce the binding of both strains

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Summary

Introduction

Group A rotaviruses, an important cause of severe diarrhea in children and young animals, initiate infection via interactions of the VP8* domain of the VP4 spike protein with cell surface sialic acids (SAs) or histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs). The two strains replicated in differentiated bovine small intestinal enteroids and in their human counterparts that lack ␣2,6-linked SA or ␣Gal HBGA, suggesting that additional or alternative receptors such as integrins, hsp, and tight-junction proteins bound directly to the VP5* domain can be used by the P[5]-bearing strains to initiate the infection of human cells. The VP8* domain of some animal RVAs has been shown to require N-acetylneuraminic acid ( termed sialic acid [SA]), found in complex glycans on cell membrane glycoproteins or glycolipids, as demonstrated by dramatically reduced infectivity following neuraminidase (NA) pretreatment of cells (5, 7, 13) These strains have been classified as NA sensitive (5, 7, 13). Internal SAs within oligosaccharide structures are less sensitive or even insensitive to NA, and some NA-insensitive strains have been shown to bind to the internal SAs of glycolipids, such as the GM1a ganglioside (16, 17)

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