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result(s) for
"Nemerow, Glen R"
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Integrin-Targeting Strategies for Adenovirus Gene Therapy
Numerous human adenovirus (AdV) types are endowed with arginine–glycine–aspartic acid (RGD) sequences that enable them to recognize vitronectin-binding (αv) integrins. These RGD-binding cell receptors mediate AdV entry into host cells, a crucial early step in virus infection. Integrin interactions with adenoviruses not only initiate receptor-mediated endocytosis but also facilitate AdV capsid disassembly, a prerequisite for membrane penetration by AdV protein VI. This review discusses fundamental aspects of AdV–host interactions mediated by integrins. Recent efforts to re-engineer AdV vectors and non-viral nanoparticles to target αv integrins for bioimaging and the eradication of cancer cells will also be discussed.
Journal Article
Crystal Structure of Human Adenovirus at 3.5 Å Resolution
by
Stewart, Phoebe L
,
Nemerow, Glen R
,
Natchiar, S. Kundhavai
in
Adenoviruses
,
Adenoviruses, Human - chemistry
,
Adenoviruses, Human - physiology
2010
Rational development of adenovirus vectors for therapeutic gene transfer is hampered by the lack of accurate structural information. Here, we report the x-ray structure at 3.5 angstrom resolution of the 150-megadalton adenovirus capsid containing nearly 1 million amino acids. We describe interactions between the major capsid protein (hexon) and several accessory molecules that stabilize the capsid. The virus structure also reveals an altered association between the penton base and the trimeric fiber protein, perhaps reflecting an early event in cell entry. The high-resolution structure provides a substantial advance toward understanding the assembly and cell entry mechanisms of a large double-stranded DNA virus and provides new opportunities for improving adenovirus-mediated gene transfer.
Journal Article
Adenovirus Tales: From the Cell Surface to the Nuclear Pore Complex
by
Nemerow, Glen R.
,
Kremer, Eric J.
in
Adenoviridae - physiology
,
Adenoviridae Infections - metabolism
,
Adenoviruses
2015
[...]it is still unclear how significantly the integrin repertoire involved in membrane penetration influences different AdV types. [...]when injected intravenously in mice, some AdVs can interact with specific coagulation factors [9] that alter tissue tropism by preventing binding of naturally occurring antibodies and then by acting as a bridge to attach to proteoglycans on liver cells [10]. [...]the routes and modes of AdV cell entry are variable and cell-type dependent.
Journal Article
Humoral immune response to adenovirus induce tolerogenic bystander dendritic cells that promote generation of regulatory T cells
by
Amelio, Patrizia
,
Moyer, Crystal
,
Nemerow, Glen R.
in
Activation
,
Adenovirus infections
,
Adenoviruses
2018
Following repeated encounters with adenoviruses most of us develop robust humoral and cellular immune responses that are thought to act together to combat ongoing and subsequent infections. Yet in spite of robust immune responses, adenoviruses establish subclinical persistent infections that can last for decades. While adenovirus persistence pose minimal risk in B-cell compromised individuals, if T-cell immunity is severely compromised reactivation of latent adenoviruses can be life threatening. This dichotomy led us to ask how anti-adenovirus antibodies influence adenovirus T-cell immunity. Using primary human blood cells, transcriptome and secretome profiling, and pharmacological, biochemical, genetic, molecular, and cell biological approaches, we initially found that healthy adults harbor adenovirus-specific regulatory T cells (Tregs). As peripherally induced Tregs are generated by tolerogenic dendritic cells (DCs), we then addressed how tolerogenic DCs could be created. Here, we demonstrate that DCs that take up immunoglobulin-complexed (IC)-adenoviruses create an environment that causes bystander DCs to become tolerogenic. These adenovirus antigen loaded tolerogenic DCs can drive naïve T cells to mature into adenovirus-specific Tregs. Our study reveals a mechanism by which an antiviral humoral responses could, counterintuitively, favor virus persistence.
Journal Article
Insight into the Mechanisms of Adenovirus Capsid Disassembly from Studies of Defensin Neutralization
by
Silvestry, Mariena
,
Lu, Wuyuan
,
Nemerow, Glen R.
in
Adenoviridae Infections - drug therapy
,
Adenoviridae Infections - metabolism
,
Adenoviridae Infections - virology
2010
Defensins are effectors of the innate immune response with potent antibacterial activity. Their role in antiviral immunity, particularly for non-enveloped viruses, is poorly understood. We recently found that human alpha-defensins inhibit human adenovirus (HAdV) by preventing virus uncoating and release of the endosomalytic protein VI during cell entry. Consequently, AdV remains trapped in the endosomal/lysosomal pathway rather than trafficking to the nucleus. To gain insight into the mechanism of defensin-mediated neutralization, we analyzed the specificity of the AdV-defensin interaction. Sensitivity to alpha-defensin neutralization is a common feature of HAdV species A, B1, B2, C, and E, whereas species D and F are resistant. Thousands of defensin molecules bind with low micromolar affinity to a sensitive serotype, but only a low level of binding is observed to resistant serotypes. Neutralization is dependent upon a correctly folded defensin molecule, suggesting that specific molecular interactions occur with the virion. CryoEM structural studies and protein sequence analysis led to a hypothesis that neutralization determinants are located in a region spanning the fiber and penton base proteins. This model was supported by infectivity studies using virus chimeras comprised of capsid proteins from sensitive and resistant serotypes. These findings suggest a mechanism in which defensin binding to critical sites on the AdV capsid prevents vertex removal and thereby blocks subsequent steps in uncoating that are required for release of protein VI and endosomalysis during infection. In addition to informing the mechanism of defensin-mediated neutralization of a non-enveloped virus, these studies provide insight into the mechanism of AdV uncoating and suggest new strategies to disrupt this process and inhibit infection.
Journal Article
An Intrinsically Disordered Region of the Adenovirus Capsid Is Implicated in Neutralization by Human Alpha Defensin 5
by
Kim, Robert
,
Nemerow, Glen R.
,
Flatt, Justin W.
in
Adenoviruses
,
Adenoviruses, Human - chemistry
,
alpha-Defensins - chemistry
2013
Human α-defensins are proteins of the innate immune system that suppress viral and bacterial infections by multiple mechanisms including membrane disruption. For viruses that lack envelopes, such as human adenovirus (HAdV), other, less well defined, mechanisms must be involved. A previous structural study on the interaction of an α-defensin, human α-defensin 5 (HD5), with HAdV led to a proposed mechanism in which HD5 stabilizes the vertex region of the capsid and blocks uncoating steps required for infectivity. Studies with virus chimeras comprised of capsid proteins from sensitive and resistant serotypes supported this model. To further characterize the critical binding site, we determined subnanometer resolution cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) structures of HD5 complexed with both neutralization-sensitive and -resistant HAdV chimeras. Models were built for the vertex regions of these chimeras with monomeric and dimeric forms of HD5 in various initial orientations. CryoEM guided molecular dynamics flexible fitting (MDFF) was used to restrain the majority of the vertex model in well-defined cryoEM density. The RGD-containing penton base loops of both the sensitive and resistant virus chimeras are predicted to be intrinsically disordered, and little cryoEM density is observed for them. In simulations these loops from the sensitive virus chimera, interact with HD5, bridge the penton base and fiber proteins, and provides significant stabilization with a three-fold increase in the intermolecular nonbonded interactions of the vertex complex. In the case of the resistant virus chimera, simulations revealed fewer bridging interactions and reduced stabilization by HD5. This study implicates a key dynamic region in mediating a stabilizing interaction between a viral capsid and a protein of the innate immune system with potent anti-viral activity.
Journal Article
Coagulation factor defends adenovirus from immune attack
by
Nemerow, Glen R
in
631/326/596
,
Adenoviridae - immunology
,
Adenoviridae Infections - immunology
2013
Adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) has been intensively studied as a viral vector for gene therapy, and understanding host–Ad5 interactions will be key to the safe and effective use of this vector. A recent study in mice provides new insights in this area by showing that Ad5 enlists a host coagulation factor to overcome complement-mediated blockade and infect the liver (pages
452–457
).
Journal Article
Structures and organization of adenovirus cement proteins provide insights into the role of capsid maturation in virus entry and infection
by
Nemerow, Glen R.
,
Reddy, Vijay S.
in
Adenovirus
,
Adenoviruses
,
Adenoviruses, Human - chemistry
2014
Adenovirus cement proteins play crucial roles in virion assembly, disassembly, cell entry, and infection. Based on a refined crystal structure of the adenovirus virion at 3.8-Å resolution, we have determined the structures of all of the cement proteins (IIIa, VI, VIII, and IX) and their organization in two distinct layers. We have significantly revised the recent cryoelectron microscopy models for proteins IIIa and IX and show that both are located on the capsid exterior. Together, the cement proteins exclusively stabilize the hexon shell, thus rendering penton vertices the weakest links of the adenovirus capsid. We describe, for the first time to our knowledge, the structure of protein VI, a key membrane-lytic molecule, and unveil its associations with VIII and core protein V, which together glue peripentonal hexons beneath the vertex region and connect them to the rest of the capsid on the interior. Following virion maturation, the cleaved N-terminal propeptide of VI is observed, reaching deep into the peripentonal hexon cavity, detached from the membrane-lytic domain, so that the latter can be released. Our results thus provide the molecular basis for the requirement of maturation cleavage of protein VI. This process is essential for untethering and release of the membrane-lytic region, which is known to mediate endosome rupture and delivery of partially disassembled virions into the host cell cytoplasm.
Journal Article
The influence of adenovirus fiber structure and function on vector development for gene therapy
by
Wu, Eugene
,
Nemerow, Glen R.
,
Nicklin, Stuart A.
in
Adenoviridae - chemistry
,
Adenoviridae - genetics
,
Adenoviridae - ultrastructure
2005
The collective attributes of adenoviruses (Ads), including ease of accomplishing replication deficiency, readily achievable high titers, encoding of large expression cassettes, efficiency of gene delivery to most cell types, and well-characterized biology, have made Ads, particularly Ad serotype 5 (Ad 5), some of the most utilized vectors for gene delivery. In recent years, however, it has become apparent that additional aspects of basic Ad virology must be uncovered for this vector system to succeed in the clinic. While local gene delivery is generally efficient, the broad tropism of Ad 5 and its tendency to home to the liver after systemic administration have proved to be limitations for other therapeutic applications, such as the treatment of disseminated cancers and cardiovascular disease. This has refocused research into the biology of Ad capsid components, particularly the main tropism determinant, the fiber/penton base complex, and their influence on transduction of selected cell types in vivo.
Journal Article