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Citation
Tags
HERO ID
7004305
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
TIM-family Proteins Promote Infection of Multiple Enveloped Viruses through Virion-associated Phosphatidylserine
Author(s)
Jemielity, S; Umetsu, DT; Dekruyff, RH; Choe, H; Wang, JJ; Chan, YKai; Ahmed, AA; Li, W; Monahan, S; Bu, Xia; Farzan, M; Freeman, GJ; ,
Year
2013
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
P L o S Pathogens
ISSN:
1553-7366
Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Location
SAN FRANCISCO
PMID
23555248
DOI
10.1371/journal.ppat.1003232
Web of Science Id
WOS:000316953800032
Abstract
Human T-cell Immunoglobulin and Mucin-domain containing proteins (TIM1, 3, and 4) specifically bind phosphatidylserine (PS). TIM1 has been proposed to serve as a cellular receptor for hepatitis A virus and Ebola virus and as an entry factor for dengue virus. Here we show that TIM1 promotes infection of retroviruses and virus-like particles (VLPs) pseudotyped with a range of viral entry proteins, in particular those from the filovirus, flavivirus, New World arenavirus and alphavirus families. TIM1 also robustly enhanced the infection of replication-competent viruses from the same families, including dengue, Tacaribe, Sindbis and Ross River viruses. All interactions between TIM1 and pseudoviruses or VLPs were PS-mediated, as demonstrated with liposome blocking and TIM1 mutagenesis experiments. In addition, other PS-binding proteins, such as Axl and TIM4, promoted infection similarly to TIM1. Finally, the blocking of PS receptors on macrophages inhibited the entry of Ebola VLPs, suggesting that PS receptors can contribute to infection in physiologically relevant cells. Notably, infection mediated by the entry proteins of Lassa fever virus, influenza A virus and SARS coronavirus was largely unaffected by TIM1 expression. Taken together our data show that TIM1 and related PS-binding proteins promote infection of diverse families of enveloped viruses, and may therefore be useful targets for broad-spectrum antiviral therapies.
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