Plasmalemmal vesicle associated protein (PV1) modulates SV40 virus infectivity in CV-1 cells

Dan Tse, David A. Armstrong, Ariella Oppenheim, Dmitry Kuksin, Leonard Norkin, Radu V. Stan*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Plasmalemmal vesicle associated protein (Plvap/PV1) is a structural protein required for the formation of the stomatal diaphragms of caveolae. Caveolae are plasma membrane invaginations that were implicated in SV40 virus entry in primate cells. Here we show that de novo Plvap/PV1 expression in CV-1 green monkey epithelial cells significantly reduces the ability of SV40 virus to establish productive infection, when cells are incubated with low concentrations of the virus. However, in presence of high viral titers PV1 has no effect on SV40 virus infectivity. Mechanistically, PV1 expression does not reduce the cell surface expression of known SV40 receptors such as GM1 ganglioside and MHC class I proteins. Furthermore, PV1 does not reduce the binding of virus-like particles made by SV40 VP1 protein to the CV-1 cell surface and does not impact their internalization when cells are incubated with either high or low VLP concentrations. These results suggest that PV1 protein is able to block SV40 infectivity at low but not at high viral concentration either by interfering with the infective internalization pathway at the cell surface or at a post internalization step.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)220-225
Number of pages6
JournalBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
Volume412
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Aug 2011

Keywords

  • Endocytosis
  • Plasmalemmal vesicle associated protein
  • SV40 infectivity
  • Stomatal diaphragm

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