Attenuation of CD4+ T-cell function by human adenovirus type 35 is mediated by the knob protein

WC Adams, RJ Berenson… - Journal of general …, 2012 - microbiologyresearch.org
WC Adams, RJ Berenson, GB Karlsson Hedestam, A Lieber, RA Koup, K Loré
Journal of general virology, 2012microbiologyresearch.org
The complement-regulatory protein CD46 is the primary receptor for human adenovirus type
35 (HAdV-35) and can regulate human immune-cell activation. CD4+ T-cells are critical for
initiating and maintaining adaptive immunity elicited by infection or vaccination. It was
reported previously that HAdV-35 can bind these cells and suppress their activation. The
data reported here demonstrate that recombinant trimeric HAdV-35 knob proteins alone can
induce CD46 receptor downregulation and inhibit interleukin-2 production and proliferation …
The complement-regulatory protein CD46 is the primary receptor for human adenovirus type 35 (HAdV-35) and can regulate human immune-cell activation. CD4 + T-cells are critical for initiating and maintaining adaptive immunity elicited by infection or vaccination. It was reported previously that HAdV-35 can bind these cells and suppress their activation. The data reported here demonstrate that recombinant trimeric HAdV-35 knob proteins alone can induce CD46 receptor downregulation and inhibit interleukin-2 production and proliferation of human CD4+ T-cells in vitro similarly to mAbs specific to the CD46 region bound by HAdV-35 knobs. A mutant knob protein with increased affinity for CD46 compared with the wild-type knob caused equivalent effects. In contrast, a CD46-binding-deficient mutant knob protein did not inhibit T-cell activation. Thus, the capacity of HAdV-35 to attenuate human CD4 + T-cell activation depends predominantly on knob interactions with CD46 and can occur independently of infection.
Microbiology Research