Antibody escape by polyomavirus capsid mutation facilitates neurovirulence

JCPyV polyomavirus, a member of the human virome, causes progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), an oft-fatal demyelinating brain disease in individuals receiving immunomodulatory therapies. Mutations in the major viral capsid protein, VP1, are common in JCPyV from PML patients (JCPyV-PML)...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2020-09, Vol.9, Article 61056
Hauptverfasser: Lauver, Matthew D., Goetschius, Daniel J., Netherby-Winslow, Colleen S., Ayers, Katelyn N., Jin, Ge, Haas, Daniel G., Frost, Elizabeth L., Cho, Sung Hyun, Bator, Carol, Bywaters, Stephanie M., Christensen, Neil D., Hafenstein, Susan L., Lukacher, Aron E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:JCPyV polyomavirus, a member of the human virome, causes progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), an oft-fatal demyelinating brain disease in individuals receiving immunomodulatory therapies. Mutations in the major viral capsid protein, VP1, are common in JCPyV from PML patients (JCPyV-PML) but whether they confer neurovirulence or escape from virus-neutralizing antibody (nAb) in vivo is unknown. A mouse polyomavirus (MuPyV) with a sequence-equivalent JCPyV-PML VP1 mutation replicated poorly in the kidney, a major reservoir for JCPyV persistence, but retained the CNS infectivity, cell tropism, and neuropathology of the parental virus. This mutation rendered MuPyV resistant to a monoclonal Ab (mAb), whose specificity overlapped the endogenous anti-VP1 response. Using cryo-EM and a custom sub-particle refinement approach, we resolved an MuPyV:Fab complex map to 3.2 angstrom resolution. The structure revealed the mechanism of mAb evasion. Our findings demonstrate convergence between nAb evasion and CNS neurovirulence in vivo by a frequent JCPyV-PML VP1 mutation.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.61056