EphrinB2 was recently discovered as a functional receptor for Nipah virus (NiV), a lethal emerging paramyxovirus. Ephrins constitute a class of homologous ligands for the Eph class of receptor tyrosine kinases and exhibit overlapping expression patterns. Thus, we examined whether other ephrins might serve as alternative receptors for NiV. Here, we show that of all known ephrins (ephrinA1–A5 and ephrinB1–B3), only the soluble Fc-fusion proteins of ephrinB3, in addition to ephrinB2, bound to soluble NiV attachment protein G (NiV-G). Soluble NiV-G bound to cell surface ephrinB3 and B2 with subnanomolar affinities (Kd = 0.58 nM and 0.06 nM for ephrinB3 and B2, respectively). Surface plasmon resonance analysis indicated that the relatively lower affinity of NiV-G for ephrinB3 was largely due to a faster off-rate (Koff = 1.94 × 10?3 s?1 versus 1.06 × 10?4 s?1 for ephrinB3 and B2, respectively). EphrinB3 was sufficient to allow for viral entry of both pseudotype and live NiV. Soluble ephrinB2 and B3 were able to compete for NiV-envelope-mediated viral entry on both ephrinB2- and B3-expressing cells, suggesting that NiV-G interacts with both ephrinB2 and B3 via an overlapping site. Mutational analysis indicated that the Leu–Trp residues in the solvent exposed G–H loop of ephrinB2 and B3 were critical determinants of NiV binding and entry. Indeed, replacement of the Tyr–Met residues in the homologous positions in ephrinB1 with Leu–Trp conferred NiV receptor activity to ephrinB1. Thus, ephrinB3 is a bona fide alternate receptor for NiV entry, and two residues in the G–H loop of the ephrin B-class ligands are critical determinants of NiV receptor activity.
References
[1]
Chua KB, Bellini WJ, Rota PA, Harcourt BH, Tamin A, et al. (2000) Nipah virus: A recently emergent deadly paramyxovirus. Science 288: 1432–1435.
[2]
Harcourt BH, Tamin A, Ksiazek TG, Rollin PE, Anderson LJ, et al. (2000) Molecular characterization of Nipah virus, a newly emergent paramyxovirus. Virology 271: 334–349.
[3]
Parashar UD, Sunn LM, Ong F, Mounts AW, Arif MT, et al. (2000) Case-control study of risk factors for human infection with a new zoonotic paramyxovirus, Nipah virus, during a 1998–1999 outbreak of severe encephalitis in Malaysia. J Infect Dis 181: 1755–1759.
[4]
Hsu VP, Hossain MJ, Parashar UD, Ali MM, Ksiazek TG, et al. (2004) Nipah virus encephalitis reemergence, Bangladesh. Emerg Infect Dis 10: 2082–2087.
[5]
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (2004) Person-to-person transmission of Nipah virus during outbreak in Faridpur District, 2004. Health Sci Bull 2: 5–9. Available: http://www.icddrb.org/pub/publication.js?p?classificationID=56&pubID=5252. Accessed 10 January 2006.
[6]
Lam SK (2003) Nipah virus—A potential agent of bioterrorism? Antiviral Res 57: 113–119.
[7]
Wong KT, Shieh WJ, Kumar S, Norain K, Abdullah W, et al. (2002) Nipah virus infection: Pathology and pathogenesis of an emerging paramyxoviral zoonosis. Am J Pathol 161: 2153–2167.
[8]
Negrete OA, Levroney E, Aguilar H, Bertolotti-Ciarlet A, Nazarian R, et al. (2005) EphrinB2 is the entry receptor for Nipah virus, an emergent deadly paramyxovirus. Nature 436: 401–405.
[9]
Bonaparte MI, Dimitrov AS, Bossart KN, Crameri G, Mungall BA, et al. (2005) Ephrin-B2 ligand is a functional receptor for Hendra virus and Nipah virus. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102: 10652–10657.
[10]
Poliakov A, Cotrina M, Wilkinson DG (2004) Diverse roles of Eph receptors and ephrins in the regulation of cell migration and tissue assembly. Dev Cell 7: 465–480.
[11]
Palmer A, Klein R (2003) Multiple roles of ephrins in morphogenesis, neuronal networking, and brain function. Genes Dev 17: 1429–1450.
[12]
Hooper P, Zaki S, Daniels P, Middleton D (2001) Comparative pathology of the diseases caused by Hendra and Nipah viruses. Microbes Infect 3: 315–322.
[13]
Flanagan JG, Vanderhaeghen P (1998) The ephrins and Eph receptors in neural development. Annu Rev Neurosci 21: 309–345.
[14]
Cheng N, Brantley DM, Chen J (2002) The ephrins and Eph receptors in angiogenesis. Cytokine Growth Factor Rev 13: 75–85.
[15]
Surawska H, Ma PC, Salgia R (2004) The role of ephrins and Eph receptors in cancer. Cytokine Growth Factor Rev 15: 419–433.
[16]
Yokoyama N, Romero MI, Cowan CA, Galvan P, Helmbacher F, et al. (2001) Forward signaling mediated by ephrin-B3 prevents contralateral corticospinal axons from recrossing the spinal cord midline. Neuron 29: 85–97.
[17]
Kullander K, Croll SD, Zimmer M, Pan L, McClain J, et al. (2001) Ephrin-B3 is the midline barrier that prevents corticospinal tract axons from recrossing, allowing for unilateral motor control. Genes Dev 15: 877–888.
[18]
Flenniken AM, Gale NW, Yancopoulos GD, Wilkinson DG (1996) Distinct and overlapping expression patterns of ligands for Eph-related receptor tyrosine kinases during mouse embryogenesis. Dev Biol 179: 382–401.
[19]
Huynh-Do U, Vindis C, Liu H, Cerretti DP, McGrew JT, et al. (2002) Ephrin-B1 transduces signals to activate integrin-mediated migration, attachment and angiogenesis. J Cell Sci 115: 3073–3081.
[20]
Esko JD, Stewart TE, Taylor WH (1985) Animal cell mutants defective in glycosaminoglycan biosynthesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 82: 3197–3201.
[21]
Blits-Huizinga CT, Nelersa CM, Malhotra A, Liebl DJ (2004) Ephrins and their receptors: Binding versus biology. IUBMB Life 56: 257–265.
[22]
Himanen JP, Rajashankar KR, Lackmann M, Cowan CA, Henkemeyer M, et al. (2001) Crystal structure of an Eph receptor–ephrin complex. Nature 414: 933–938.
[23]
Kullander K, Butt SJ, Lebret JM, Lundfald L, Restrepo CE, et al. (2003) Role of EphA4 and EphrinB3 in local neuronal circuits that control walking. Science 299: 1889–1892.
[24]
Wang HU, Chen ZF, Anderson DJ (1998) Molecular distinction and angiogenic interaction between embryonic arteries and veins revealed by ephrin-B2 and its receptor Eph-B4. Cell 93: 741–753.
[25]
Bergemann AD, Zhang L, Chiang MK, Brambilla R, Klein R, et al. (1998) Ephrin-B3, a ligand for the receptor EphB3, expressed at the midline of the developing neural tube. Oncogene 16: 471–480.
[26]
Tang XX, Pleasure DE, Ikegaki N (1997) cDNA cloning, chromosomal localization, and expression pattern of EPLG8, a new member of the EPLG gene family encoding ligands of EPH-related protein-tyrosine kinase receptors. Genomics 41: 17–24.
[27]
Liebl DJ, Morris CJ, Henkemeyer M, Parada LF (2003) mRNA expression of ephrins and Eph receptor tyrosine kinases in the neonatal and adult mouse central nervous system. J Neurosci Res 71: 7–22.
[28]
Grunwald IC, Korte M, Wolfer D, Wilkinson GA, Unsicker K, et al. (2001) Kinase-independent requirement of EphB2 receptors in hippocampal synaptic plasticity. Neuron 32: 1027–1040.
[29]
Goh KJ, Tan CT, Chew NK, Tan PS, Kamarulzaman A, et al. (2000) Clinical features of Nipah virus encephalitis among pig farmers in Malaysia. N Engl J Med 342: 1229–1235.
[30]
Lim CC, Lee WL, Leo YS, Lee KE, Chan KP, et al. (2003) Late clinical and magnetic resonance imaging follow up of Nipah virus infection. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 74: 131–133.
[31]
Lim CC, Sitoh YY, Hui F, Lee KE, Ang BS, et al. (2000) Nipah viral encephalitis or Japanese encephalitis? MR findings in a new zoonotic disease. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 21: 455–461.
[32]
Levroney EL, Aguilar HC, Fulcher JA, Kohatsu L, Pace KE, et al. (2005) Novel innate immune functions for galectin-1: Galectin-1 inhibits cell fusion by Nipah virus envelope glycoproteins and augments dendritic cell secretion of proinflammatory cytokines. J Immunol 175: 413–420.
[33]
Augustin HG, Reiss Y (2003) EphB receptors and ephrinB ligands: Regulators of vascular assembly and homeostasis. Cell Tissue Res 314: 25–31.
[34]
Kullander K, Klein R (2002) Mechanisms and functions of Eph and ephrin signalling. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 3: 475–486.
[35]
Mellitzer G, Xu Q, Wilkinson DG (1999) Eph receptors and ephrins restrict cell intermingling and communication. Nature 400: 77–81.
[36]
Conover JC, Doetsch F, Garcia-Verdugo JM, Gale NW, Yancopoulos GD, et al. (2000) Disruption of Eph/ephrin signaling affects migration and proliferation in the adult subventricular zone. Nat Neurosci 3: 1091–1097.
[37]
Miranda JD, White LA, Marcillo AE, Willson CA, Jagid J, et al. (1999) Induction of Eph B3 after spinal cord injury. Exp Neurol 156: 218–222.
[38]
Moreno-Flores MT, Wandosell F (1999) Up-regulation of Eph tyrosine kinase receptors after excitotoxic injury in adult hippocampus. Neuroscience 91: 193–201.
[39]
Ivanov AI, Steiner AA, Scheck AC, Romanovsky AA (2005) Expression of Eph receptors and their ligands, ephrins, during lipopolysaccharide fever in rats. Physiol Genomics 21: 152–160.
[40]
Masood R, Xia G, Smith DL, Scalia P, Still JG, et al. (2005) Ephrin B2 expression in Kaposi sarcoma is induced by human herpesvirus type 8: Phenotype switch from venous to arterial endothelium. Blood 105: 1310–1318.
[41]
Ng BY, Lim CC, Yeoh A, Lee WL (2004) Neuropsychiatric sequelae of Nipah virus encephalitis. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 16: 500–504.
[42]
Daszak P, Tabor GM, Kilpatrick AM, Epstein J, Plowright R (2004) Conservation medicine and a new agenda for emerging diseases. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1026: 1–11.
[43]
Field H, Young P, Yob JM, Mills J, Hall L, et al. (2001) The natural history of Hendra and Nipah viruses. Microbes Infect 3: 307–314.
[44]
Reynes JM, Counor D, Ong S, Faure C, Seng V, et al. (2005) Nipah virus in Lyle's flying foxes, Cambodia. Emerg Infect Dis 11: 1042–1047.
[45]
de Parseval A, Su SV, Elder JH, Lee B (2004) Specific interaction of feline immunodeficiency virus surface glycoprotein with human DC-SIGN. J Virol 78: 2597–2600.