Acidity/Alkalinity of Japanese Encephalitis Virus E Protein Residue 138 Alters Neurovirulence in Mice

Journal of Virology
Xuchen ZhengGuangzhi Tong

Abstract

The Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) envelope (E) protein, as one of mediators of virus entry into host cells, plays a critical role in determining virulence. The Glu-to-Lys mutation of residue 138 in E protein (E138) plays an important role in attenuating JEV vaccine strain SA14-14-2. However, it is not clear how E138 attenuates JEV. Here, we demonstrate that the Glu-to-Arg mutation of E138 also determines the attenuation of JEV strain 10S3. Likewise, for its parent strain (HEN0701), a virulence strain, the mutations of E138 are responsible for virulence alteration. Furthermore, we demonstrated that mutations of alkaline residues in E138 contributed to the attenuation of neurovirulence; in contrast, mutations of acidic residues enhanced the neurovirulence of the strains. Moreover, acidity in residue E47 had a similar effect on neurovirulence. Furthermore, the alkaline E138 residue enhanced susceptibility to heparin inhibition in vitro and limited JEV diffusion in mouse brain. These results suggest that the acidity/alkalinity of the E138 residue plays an important role in neurovirulence determination.IMPORTANCE The E protein is the only glycoprotein in mature JEV, and it plays an important role in viral neurovirulence. E prote...Continue Reading

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