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Inhibition of influenza virus activity by the bovine seminal plasma protein PDC-109.

Robert-William WelkeIvan HaralampievFilip SchröterBeate C BraunAndreas HerrmannChristian SiebenPeter Müller
Published in: European biophysics journal : EBJ (2019)
A number of viruses causing sexually transmissible diseases are transmitted via mammalian seminal plasma. Several components of seminal plasma have been shown to influence those viruses and their physiological impact. To unravel whether components of seminal plasma could affect viruses transmitted via other pathways, it was investigated here whether the bovine seminal plasma protein PDC-109, belonging to the Fn-type 2 protein family, influences the activity of influenza A viruses, used as a model for enveloped viruses. We found that PDC-109 inhibits the fusion of influenza virus with human erythrocyte membranes and leads to a decreased viral infection in MDCK cells. In the presence of the head group of the phospholipid phosphatidylcholine, phosphorylcholine, the inhibitory effect of PDC-109 was attenuated. This indicates that the impact of the protein is mainly caused by its binding to viral and to erythrocyte membranes thereby interfering with virus-cell binding. Our study underlines that Fn-type 2 proteins have to be considered as new antiviral components present in mammalian seminal plasma.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • amino acid
  • induced apoptosis
  • small molecule
  • cell proliferation
  • cell therapy
  • bone marrow
  • mass spectrometry
  • optic nerve
  • dna binding