TY - JOUR
T1 - Inhibition of Nipah Virus Infection In Vivo
T2 - Targeting an early stage of paramyxovirus fusion activation during viral entry
AU - Porotto, Matteo
AU - Rockx, Barry
AU - Yokoyama, Christine C.
AU - Talekar, Aparna
AU - DeVito, Ilaria
AU - Palermo, Laura M.
AU - Liu, Jie
AU - Cortese, Riccardo
AU - Lu, Min
AU - Feldmann, Heinz
AU - Pessi, Antonello
AU - Moscona, Anne
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank GTx, Inc. for the kind gift of VSV-ΔG-RFP VSV-G. We are grateful to Ashton Kutcher and Jonathan Ledecky for their support, to Dan and Nancy Paduano for support of innovative research projects, and to the Friedman Family Foundation for renovation of our laboratories at Weill Cornell Medical College. We acknowledge the flow cytometry support from Stanka Semova and Sergei Rudchenko in the Flow Cytometry Facility of the Hospital for Special Surgery/Weill Cornell Medical College. We acknowledge the Northeast Center of Excellence for Bio-defense and Emerging Infections Disease Research's Proteomics Core for peptide synthesis and purification.
PY - 2010/10
Y1 - 2010/10
N2 - In the paramyxovirus cell entry process, receptor binding triggers conformational changes in the fusion protein (F) leading to viral and cellular membrane fusion. Peptides derived from C-terminal heptad repeat (HRC) regions in F have been shown to inhibit fusion by preventing formation of the fusogenic six-helix bundle. We recently showed that the addition of a cholesterol group to HRC peptides active against Nipah virus targets these peptides to the membrane where fusion occurs, dramatically increasing their antiviral effect. In this work, we report that unlike the untagged HRC peptides, which bind to the postulated extended intermediate state bridging the viral and cell membranes, the cholesterol tagged HRC-derived peptides interact with F before the fusion peptide inserts into the target cell membrane, thus capturing an earlier stage in the F-activation process. Furthermore, we show that cholesterol tagging renders these peptides active in vivo: the cholesterol-tagged peptides cross the blood brain barrier, and effectively prevent and treat in an established animal model what would otherwise be fatal Nipah virus encephalitis. The in vivo efficacy of cholesterol-tagged peptides, and in particular their ability to penetrate the CNS, suggests that they are promising candidates for the prevention or therapy of infection by Nipah and other lethal paramyxoviruses.
AB - In the paramyxovirus cell entry process, receptor binding triggers conformational changes in the fusion protein (F) leading to viral and cellular membrane fusion. Peptides derived from C-terminal heptad repeat (HRC) regions in F have been shown to inhibit fusion by preventing formation of the fusogenic six-helix bundle. We recently showed that the addition of a cholesterol group to HRC peptides active against Nipah virus targets these peptides to the membrane where fusion occurs, dramatically increasing their antiviral effect. In this work, we report that unlike the untagged HRC peptides, which bind to the postulated extended intermediate state bridging the viral and cell membranes, the cholesterol tagged HRC-derived peptides interact with F before the fusion peptide inserts into the target cell membrane, thus capturing an earlier stage in the F-activation process. Furthermore, we show that cholesterol tagging renders these peptides active in vivo: the cholesterol-tagged peptides cross the blood brain barrier, and effectively prevent and treat in an established animal model what would otherwise be fatal Nipah virus encephalitis. The in vivo efficacy of cholesterol-tagged peptides, and in particular their ability to penetrate the CNS, suggests that they are promising candidates for the prevention or therapy of infection by Nipah and other lethal paramyxoviruses.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78449243403&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.ppat.1001168
DO - 10.1371/journal.ppat.1001168
M3 - Article
C2 - 21060819
AN - SCOPUS:78449243403
SN - 1553-7366
VL - 6
JO - PLoS pathogens
JF - PLoS pathogens
IS - 10
M1 - e1001168
ER -