Cleavage of group 1 coronavirus spike proteins; how furin cleavage is traded off against heparan sulfate binding upon cell culture adaptation

Publication date

2008

Authors

de Haan, XanderORCID 0000-0002-4459-9874ISNI 0000000395765470
Haijema, B.J.
Schellen, P.
Schreur, P.W.
te Lintelo, E.
Vennema, H.
Rottier, PeterISNI 0000000029654607

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Article

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Abstract

A longstanding enigmatic feature of the group 1 coronaviruses is the uncleaved phenotype of their spike protein, an exceptional property among class I fusion proteins. Here, however, we show that some group 1 coronavirus spike proteins carry a furin enzyme recognition motif and can actually be cleaved, as demonstrated for a feline coronavirus. Interestingly, this feature can be lost during cell culture adaptation by a single mutation in the cleavage motif; this, however, preserves a heparan sulfate binding motif and renders infection by the virus heparan sulfate dependent. We identified a similar cell culture adaptation for the human coronavirus OC43.

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Citation

de Haan, C A M, Haijema, B J, Schellen, P, Schreur, P W, te Lintelo, E, Vennema, H & Rottier, P J M 2008, 'Cleavage of group 1 coronavirus spike proteins; how furin cleavage is traded off against heparan sulfate binding upon cell culture adaptation', Journal of Virology, vol. 82, no. 12, pp. 6078-6083. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00074-08