Publication | Open Access
The Nipah Virus Fusion Protein Is Cleaved within the Endosomal Compartment
99
Citations
33
References
2005
Year
Viral ReplicationViral PathogenesisImmunologyMolecular BiologyPathologyViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureMembrane FusionNipah VirusEndocytic PathwayProteomicsViral GeneticsNiv FusionDna ReplicationVirologyCell BiologyStructural BiologyMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesEndosomal CompartmentPathogenesisNiv F ProteinVirus-host InteractionMedicine
Nipah virus (NiV) is a recently emerged and highly pathogenic paramyxovirus that causes a systemic infection in animals and humans and can infect a wide range of cultured cells. Interestingly, the NiV fusion (F) protein has a single arginine at the cleavage site similar to paramyxoviruses that are activated by exogenous trypsin-like enzymes only present in specific cells and tissues and therefore only cause localized infections. We show here that NiV F activation is not mediated by an exogenous serum protease but by an endogenous ubiquitous cellular protease after endocytosis of the protein. In addition to endocytosis, acidification of the endosome is a prerequisite for F cleavage. These results show that activation of the NiV F protein depends on a type of proteolytic cleavage that is clearly different from what is known for other paramyxoviral and orthomyxoviral fusion proteins. To our knowledge, this is the first example of a viral class I fusion protein whose activation depends on clathrin-mediated constitutive endocytosis.
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