Abstract

The glycosphingolipid (GSL) globoside (Gb4) is essential for parvovirus B19 (B19V) infection. Historically considered the cellular receptor of B19V, the role of Gb4 and its interaction with B19V are controversial. In this study, we applied artificial viral particles, genetically modified cells, and specific competitors to address the interplay between the virus and the GSL. Our findings demonstrate that Gb4 is not involved in the binding or internalization process of the virus into permissive erythroid cells, a function that corresponds to the VP1u cognate receptor. However, Gb4 is essential at a post-internalization step before the delivery of the single-stranded viral DNA into the nucleus. In susceptible erythroid Gb4 knockout cells, incoming viruses were arrested in the endosomal compartment, showing no cytoplasmic spreading of capsids as observed in Gb4-expressing cells. Hemagglutination and binding assays revealed that pH acts as a switch to modulate the affinity between the virus and the GSL. Capsids interact with Gb4 exclusively under acidic conditions and dissociate at neutral pH. Inducing a specific Gb4-mediated attachment to permissive erythroid cells by acidification of the extracellular environment led to a non-infectious uptake of the virus, indicating that low pH-mediated binding to the GSL initiates active membrane processes resulting in vesicle formation. In summary, this study provides mechanistic insight into the interaction of B19V with Gb4. The strict pH-dependent binding to the ubiquitously expressed GSL prevents the redirection of the virus to nonpermissive tissues while promoting the interaction in acidic intracellular compartments as an essential step in infectious endocytic trafficking.

Highlights

  • Parvovirus B19 (B19V) is a human pathogen discovered in 1974 [1]

  • B19V interacts with Gb4 exclusively under acidic conditions, prohibiting the interaction on the plasma membrane and promoting it inside the acidic endosomal compartments, which are engaged by the virus and the GSL after internalization

  • The hemagglutination of human erythrocytes by B19V [24], which express large quantities of Gb4 [29,30], and the hemagglutination inhibition in the presence of soluble Gb4 [25], strongly indicate that B19V interacts with Gb4

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Summary

Introduction

The virus causes infections worldwide that vary in severity depending on the age as well as the immunologic and hematologic status of the host [2,3]. The linear singlestranded DNA genome of 5.6-kb in length is encapsidated within a small, non-enveloped, icosahedral particle consisting of 60 structural proteins, VP1 and VP2 [9]. These proteins share the same sequence except for an additional amino-terminal VP1 unique region (VP1u) of 227 amino acids. The two most relevant domains in the VP1u is a receptor binding domain (RBD) required for virus uptake into host cells [11] and a phospholipase A2 (PLA2) domain required for the infection [12,13,14,15], presumably to promote endosomal escape [16]

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