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| Research article summary (published 13 Sep 2009): |
Sialylated glycans as receptor and inhibitor of enterovirus 71 infection to DLD-1 intestinal cells.
Full Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many viruses recognize specific sugar residues, particularly sulfated or sialylated glycans, as the infection receptors. A change of sialic acid (2-6)-linked galactose (SA-alpha2,6Gal) to SA-alpha2,3Gal determines the receptor for avian flu infection. The receptor for enterovirus 71 (EV71) infection that frequently causes fatal encephalitis in Asian children remains unclear. Currently, there is no effective vaccine or anti-virus agent for EV71 infection. Using DLD-1 intestinal cells, this study investigated whether SA-linked glycan on DLD-1 intestinal cells was a receptor for EV71, and whether natural SA-linked sugars from human milk could block EV71 infection. RESULTS: EV71 specifically infected DLD-1 intestinal cells but not K562 myeloid cells. Depletion of O-linked glycans or glycolipids, but not N-linked glycans, significantly decreased EV71 infection of DLD-1 cells. Pretreatment of DLD-1 cells with sialidase (10 mU, 2 hours) significantly reduced 20-fold EV71 replication (p < 0.01). Taken together, these results suggest that SA-linked O-glycans and glycolipids, but not N-glycans, on DLD-1 cells were responsible for EV71 infection. Purified SA-alpha2,3Gal and SA-alpha2,6Gal from human milk significantly inhibited EV71 infection of DLD-1 cells, indicating terminal SA-linked glycans could be receptors and inhibitors of EV71 infection. CONCLUSION: This is the first in the literature to demonstrate that EV71 uses SA-linked glycans as receptors for infection, and natural SA-linked glycans from human milk can protect intestinal cells from EV71 infection. Further studies will test how a SA-containing glycan can prevent EV71 in the future.
Author information
Author/s: Yang, Betsy (B); Chuang, Hau (H); Yang, Kuender D (KD);
Affiliation: Kaohsiung American School, Taiwan, Republic of China.
Journal and publication information
Publication Type: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Journal: Virology journal (Virol J), published in England. (Language: eng)
Reference: 2009-; vol 6 (issue ) : pp 141
Dates: Created 2009/09/25; Completed 2009/11/03;
PMID: 19751532, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 11/3/2009, IMS Date: )
Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.
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