Phocine distemper virus uses phocine and other animal SLAMs as a receptor but not human SLAM.
Fumio SekiKazue OhishiTadashi MaruyamaMakoto TakedaPublished in: Microbiology and immunology (2020)
Morbilliviruses use the signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) as a receptor to infect their hosts. Seals are almost the only animal species that show apparent infection with phocine distemper virus (PDV). Seal SLAM functioned as a PDV receptor. However, dolphin- and dog-SLAM molecules, but not human SLAM, were also fully functional PDV receptors. These data suggest that the host range of PDV is not simply determined by its SLAM usage. However, human nonsusceptibility to PDV infection may be at least partly attributable to the inability of PDV to use human SLAM as a receptor.