Publication | Open Access
Biochemical and functional analysis of the Borna disease virus G protein
60
Citations
29
References
1997
Year
Borna Disease VirusMolecular VirologyPathogenesisGlycobiologyImmunologyMolecular BiologyVirologyViral PathogenesisVirus GeneFunctional AnalysisViral Structural ProteinMedicineViral GeneticsG ProteinNeutralization Epitopes
The Borna disease virus (BDV) antigenome is comprised of five major open reading frames (ORFs). Products have been reported only for ORFs I, II, and III, encoding N (p40), P (p24/p23), and M (gp18), respectively. ORF IV predicts a 57-kDa protein with several potential glycosylation sites. Analysis of radiolabeled extracts from BDV-infected C6 cells and BHK-21 cells transfected with a Semliki Forest virus vector that contains ORF IV demonstrated the presence of a 94-kDa protein (G protein) which was sensitive to tunicamycin, endoglycosidase F/N-glycosidase, and endoglycosidase H but not to O-glycosidase. Sera from BDV-infected rats detected the G protein and had neutralization activity that was reduced following immunoadsorption with the G protein. Preincubation of cells with the G protein interfered with BDV infectivity. This effect was enhanced by treatment of the G protein with the exoglycosidase alpha-mannosidase and reduced after subsequent treatment with N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase. In concert these findings indicate that ORF IV encodes a 94-kDa N-linked glycoprotein with extensive high mannose- and/or hybrid-type oligosaccharide modifications. The presence of neutralization epitopes on the G protein and its capacity to interfere with infectivity suggest that the G protein is important for viral entry.
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