Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Different Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans Serve asCellular Receptors for HumanPapillomaviruses

View through CrossRef
ABSTRACT Papillomaviruses replicate in stratified epithelia of skin and mucosa. Infection with certain human papillomavirus (HPV) types is the main cause of anogenital neoplasia, in particular cervical cancer. Early events of papillomavirus infectivity are poorly understood. While heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) mediate initial binding to the cell surface, the class of proteins carrying heparan sulfates has not been defined. Here we examined two processes of papillomavirus infection, attachment of virus-like particles (VLP) to cells and infection with authentic HPV type 11 (HPV11) virions. Of the HSPGs, syndecan-1 is the major epithelial form and is strongly upregulated in wound edge keratinocytes. We employed K562 cells, which lack HSPGs except minor amounts of endogenous betaglycan, and stable clones that express cDNAs of syndecan-1, syndecan-4, or glypican-1. Binding of VLP correlated with levels of heparan sulfate on the cell surface. Parental K562 bound HPV16 VLP weakly, whereas all three K562 transfectants demonstrated enhanced binding, with the highest binding capacity observed for syndecan-1-transfected cells, which also expressed the most HSPG. For HPV11 infectivity assays, a high virion inoculum was required to infect K562 cells, whereas ectopic expression of syndecan-1 increased permissiveness eightfold and expression of syndecan-4 or glypican-1 fourfold. Infection of keratinocytes was eliminated by treatment with heparitinase, but not phospholipase C, further implicating the syndecan family of integral membrane proteins as receptor proteins. Human keratinocytes with a homozygous deletion of α6 integrin are permissive for HPV11 infection. These results indicate that several HSPGs can serve as HPV receptors and support a putative role for syndecan-1, rather than α6 integrin, as a primary receptor protein in natural HPV infection of keratinocytes.
Title: Different Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans Serve asCellular Receptors for HumanPapillomaviruses
Description:
ABSTRACT Papillomaviruses replicate in stratified epithelia of skin and mucosa.
Infection with certain human papillomavirus (HPV) types is the main cause of anogenital neoplasia, in particular cervical cancer.
Early events of papillomavirus infectivity are poorly understood.
While heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) mediate initial binding to the cell surface, the class of proteins carrying heparan sulfates has not been defined.
Here we examined two processes of papillomavirus infection, attachment of virus-like particles (VLP) to cells and infection with authentic HPV type 11 (HPV11) virions.
Of the HSPGs, syndecan-1 is the major epithelial form and is strongly upregulated in wound edge keratinocytes.
We employed K562 cells, which lack HSPGs except minor amounts of endogenous betaglycan, and stable clones that express cDNAs of syndecan-1, syndecan-4, or glypican-1.
Binding of VLP correlated with levels of heparan sulfate on the cell surface.
Parental K562 bound HPV16 VLP weakly, whereas all three K562 transfectants demonstrated enhanced binding, with the highest binding capacity observed for syndecan-1-transfected cells, which also expressed the most HSPG.
For HPV11 infectivity assays, a high virion inoculum was required to infect K562 cells, whereas ectopic expression of syndecan-1 increased permissiveness eightfold and expression of syndecan-4 or glypican-1 fourfold.
Infection of keratinocytes was eliminated by treatment with heparitinase, but not phospholipase C, further implicating the syndecan family of integral membrane proteins as receptor proteins.
Human keratinocytes with a homozygous deletion of α6 integrin are permissive for HPV11 infection.
These results indicate that several HSPGs can serve as HPV receptors and support a putative role for syndecan-1, rather than α6 integrin, as a primary receptor protein in natural HPV infection of keratinocytes.

Related Results

Abstract 1978: Sarcoma invasion associated with heparan sulfate degradation
Abstract 1978: Sarcoma invasion associated with heparan sulfate degradation
Abstract INTRODUCTION: Sarcomas are locally aggressive, angiogenic and spread hematogenously. The purpose of this study was to quantify the effect of heparan sulf...
Altered Glycosaminoglycan Chain Structure in a Variant of the C2 Mouse Muscle Cell Line
Altered Glycosaminoglycan Chain Structure in a Variant of the C2 Mouse Muscle Cell Line
Abstract: Experiments on the S27 cell line, a variant of the C2 mouse muscle cell line that shows reduced incorporation of 35SO4 into proteoglycans, suggest that proteoglycans play...
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography of fibroblast proteoglycans
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography of fibroblast proteoglycans
AbstractWe have investigated the hydrophobic properties of human skin fibroblast proteoglycans and related material by affinity chromatography on Octyl‐Sepharose CL‐4B in 4 M guani...
Destruction of toluene and xylene by sulfatе-reducing bacteria
Destruction of toluene and xylene by sulfatе-reducing bacteria
As a result of human activity aromatic hydrocarbons enter the environment in large quantities, contaminating it. Dropping of insufficiently treated wastewater drains considerably d...
New electrophoretic and chromatographic techniques for analysis of heparin and heparan sulfate
New electrophoretic and chromatographic techniques for analysis of heparin and heparan sulfate
AbstractHeparin (HE) and heparan sulfated glycosaminoglycans are well‐known mediators of tissue development, maintenance and functions; the activities of these polysaccharides are ...
Physiological Roles and Regulation of Mammalian Sulfate Transporters
Physiological Roles and Regulation of Mammalian Sulfate Transporters
All cells require inorganic sulfate for normal function. Sulfate is among the most important macronutrients in cells and is the fourth most abundant anion in human plasma (300 μM)....

Back to Top