| Literature DB >> 29951070 |
I-Ni Hsieh1, Xavier De Luna1, Mitchell R White1, Kevan L Hartshorn1.
Abstract
Influenza A viruses (IAVs) continue to pose major risks of morbidity and mortality during yearly epidemics and periodic pandemics. The genomic instability of IAV allows it to evade adaptive immune responses developed during prior infection. Of particular concern are pandemics which result from wholesale incorporation of viral genome sections from animal sources. These pandemic strains are radically different from circulating human strains and pose great risk for the human population. For these reasons, innate immunity plays a strong role in the initial containment of IAV infection. Soluble inhibitors present in respiratory lining fluids and blood provide a level of early protection against IAV. In general, these inhibitors act by binding to the viral hemagglutinin (HA). Surfactant protein D (SP-D) and mannose-binding lectin (MBL) attach to mannosylated glycans on the HA in a calcium dependent manner. In contrast, surfactant protein A, ficolins, and other inhibitors present sialic acid rich ligands to which the HA can bind. Among these inhibitors, SP-D seems to be the most potent due to its specific mode of binding to viral carbohydrates and its ability to strongly aggregate viral particles. We have studied specific properties of the N-terminal and collagen domain of SP-D that enable formation of highly multimerized molecules and cooperative binding among the multiple trimeric lectin domains in the protein. In addition, we have studied in depth the lectin activity of SP-D through expression of isolated lectin domains and targeted mutations of the SP-D lectin binding site. Through modifying specific residues around the saccharide binding pocket, antiviral activity of isolated lectin domains of SP-D can be markedly increased for seasonal strains of IAV. Wild-type SP-D causes little inhibition of pandemic IAV, but mutated versions of SP-D were able to inhibit pandemic IAV through enhanced binding to the reduced number of mannosylated glycans present on the HA of these strains. Through collaborative studies involving crystallography of isolated lectin domains of SP-D, glycomics analysis of the HA, and molecular modeling, the mechanism of binding of wild type and mutant forms of SP-D have been determined. These studies could guide investigation of the interactions of SP-D with other pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: carbohydrate recognition domain; collectin; glycomics; influenza A virus; surfactant protein D
Year: 2018 PMID: 29951070 PMCID: PMC6008380 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Modifications of SP-D found to increase or broaden antiviral activity for IAV.
| SP-D preparation | Modification | Effect on antiviral activity |
|---|---|---|
| Full length recombinant human SP-D | Isolation of high molecular weight multimers | Increased activity compared to trimers or dodecamers ( |
| Full length chimeric protein | Rat SP-D and conglutinin (NCRD) chimera | Increased activity compared with rat SP-D ( |
| Full length chimeric protein | Human SP-D and mannose-binding lectin (NCRD) chimera | Increased activity compared with similarly multimerized human SP-D ( |
| NCRD trimer of human SP-D | D325A or D325S mutation | Slight increase in activity compared to wild-type NCRD ( |
| NCRD trimer of human SP-D | R343V mutation | Strong increased activity compared with wild-type NCRD ( |
| NCRD trimer of human SP-D | D325A(or S) combined with R343V mutation | Increased activity compared to R343V or D325A alone; significant activity vs pandemic H1N1 and H3N2 ( |
IAV, influenza A virus; SP-D, surfactant protein D; NCRD, neck and carbohydrate recognition domain.
Figure 1Electron micrograph of dodecameric, intact surfactant protein D (SP-D) molecule (A), electron micrograph of full length dodecameric SP-D (B) and structure of H3N2 influenza A viruses hemagglutinin with glycan attachments. The red circle in panel (A) is included to highlight the globular NCRD component of the molecule. In panel (B), the blue and red arrows indicate ridges surrounding the lectin binding site of the NCRD. The ridge indicated by the blue arrow is formed by the D325 residue and that shown by the red arrow is formed by R343 [this figure was adapted from Ref. (14)].
Figure 2Differences in orientation in hemagglutinin (HA) complexes with WT (A) or D325A + R343V (B)—this figure represents the endpoints of three repeated simulations. Calcium ions are represented in orange, red, and white; WT and D325A + R343V are in transparent cartoon representation in green and purple, respectively; HA is shown in cartoon representation in cyan [this figure was reprinted with permission from Goh et al. (79)].
Figure 3Structure modeling of influenza A virus (IAV) hemagglutinin (HA) and molecular dynamics result showing binding of surfactant protein A (SP-D) neck and carbohydrate recognition domain trimer to the HA. (A) 3D model of glycosylated Phil82 hemagglutinin trimer (HA0). One HA monomer is shown in dark gray. Glycans at Asn165 and Asn246 are shown in blue and pink, respectively. (B) A model of trimeric SP-D (red ribbons) bound to three N-glycans on the H3 head domain (light gray surface). The 3D structure of the glycosylated H3 was taken from the MD simulation. In this snapshot, Manα residues at sites Asn 246, Asn 165, and Asn 246 on different protomers were approximately 45 Å apart, such that SP-D could bind each residue simultaneously. The calcium atoms found in each SP-D Manα binding site are shown (dark gray spheres) [this figure adapted from Khatri et al. (81) through free usage via Creative Commons CC-BY license].