Author: Overeem, Nico J.; Hamming, P. H. Erik; Grant, Oliver C.; Di Iorio, Daniele; Tieke, Malte; Bertolino, M. Candelaria; Li, Zeshi; Vos, Gaël; de Vries, Robert P.; Woods, Robert J.; Tito, Nicholas B.; Boons, Geert-Jan P. H.; van der Vries, Erhard; Huskens, Jurriaan
                    Title: Hierarchical Multivalent Effects Control Influenza Host Specificity  Cord-id: vszaa0o0  Document date: 2020_11_12
                    ID: vszaa0o0
                    
                    Snippet: [Image: see text] Understanding how emerging influenza viruses recognize host cells is critical in evaluating their zoonotic potential, pathogenicity, and transmissibility between humans. The surface of the influenza virus is covered with hemagglutinin (HA) proteins that can form multiple interactions with sialic acid-terminated glycans on the host cell surface. This multivalent binding affects the selectivity of the virus in ways that cannot be predicted from the individual receptor–ligand in
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: [Image: see text] Understanding how emerging influenza viruses recognize host cells is critical in evaluating their zoonotic potential, pathogenicity, and transmissibility between humans. The surface of the influenza virus is covered with hemagglutinin (HA) proteins that can form multiple interactions with sialic acid-terminated glycans on the host cell surface. This multivalent binding affects the selectivity of the virus in ways that cannot be predicted from the individual receptor–ligand interactions alone. Here, we show that the intrinsic structural and energetic differences between the interactions of avian- or human-type receptors with influenza HA translate from individual site affinity and orientation through receptor length and density on the surface into virus avidity and specificity. We introduce a method to measure virus avidity using receptor density gradients. We found that influenza viruses attached stably to a surface at receptor densities that correspond to a minimum number of approximately 8 HA–glycan interactions, but more interactions were required if the receptors were short and human-type. Thus, the avidity and specificity of influenza viruses for a host cell depend not on the sialic acid linkage alone but on a combination of linkage and the length and density of receptors on the cell surface. Our findings suggest that threshold receptor densities play a key role in virus tropism, which is a predicting factor for both their virulence and zoonotic potential.
 
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