4.6 Article

NKp46 O-Glycan Sequences That Are Involved in the Interaction with Hemagglutinin Type 1 of Influenza Virus

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 8, Pages 3789-3797

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01815-09

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Funding

  1. joint Croatia-Israel research grant
  2. European Commission [03766]

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Natural killer (NK) cells serve as a crucial first-line defense against tumors and virus-infected cells. We previously showed that lysis of influenza virus (IV)-infected cells is mediated by the interaction between the NK receptor, NKp46, and the IV hemagglutinin (HA) type 1 expressed by the infected cells. This interaction requires the presence of sialyl groups on the NKp46-T225 O-glycoforms. In the current study, we analyzed the O-glycan sequences that are imperative for the interaction between recombinant NKp46 (rNKp46) and IV H1N1 strains. We first showed that rNKp46 binding to IV H1N1 is not mediated by a glycoform unique to the Thr225 site. We then characterized the O-glycan sequences that mediate the interaction of rNKp46 and IV H1N1; we employed rNKp46s with dissimilar glycosylation patterns and IV H1N1 strains with different sialic acid alpha 2,3 and alpha 2,6 linkage preferences. The branched alpha 2,3-sialylated O-glycoform Neu5NAc alpha 2,3-Gal beta 1,4-GlcNAc beta 1,6[Neu5NAc alpha 2,3-Gal beta 1,3] GalNAc competently mediated the interaction of rNKp46 with IV H1N1, manifesting a preference for alpha 2,3 linkage. In contrast, the linear alpha 2,3-sialylated O-glycoform Neu5NAc alpha 2,3-Gal beta 1,3-GalNAc was not correlated with enhanced interaction between rNKp46 and IV H1N1 or a preference for alpha 2,3 linkage. The branched alpha 2,3- and alpha 2,6-sialylated O-glycoform Neu5NAc alpha 2,3-Gal beta 1,3[Neu5NAc alpha 2,6] GalNAc competently mediated the interaction of rNKp46 with IV H1N1, manifesting a preference for alpha 2,6 linkage. Previous viral HA-binding-specificity studies were performed with glycopolymer conjugates, free synthetic sialyl oligosaccharides, and sialidase-treated cells. This study shed light on the O-glycan sequences involved in the interaction of glycoprotein and viral hemagglutinins and may help in the design of agents inhibitory to hemagglutinin for influenza treatment.

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