Receptor recognition by a hepatitis B virus reveals a novel mode of high affinity virus-receptor interaction

Abstract
The duck hepatitis B virus model system was used to elucidate the characteristics of receptor (carboxypeptidase D, gp180) interaction with polypeptides representing the receptor binding site in the preS part of the large viral surface protein. We demonstrate the pivotal role of carboxypeptidase D for virus entry and show its C‐domain represents the virus attachment site, which binds preS with extraordinary affinity. Combining results from surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and two‐dimensional NMR analysis we resolved the contribution of preS sequence elements to complex stability and show that receptor binding potentially occurs in two steps. Initially, a short α‐helix in the C‐terminus of the receptor binding domain facilitates formation of a primary complex. This complex is stabilized sequentially, involving ∼60 most randomly structured amino acids preceding the helix. Thus, hepadnaviruses exhibit a novel mechanism of high affinity receptor interaction by conserving the potential to adapt structure during binding rather than to preserve it per se. We propose that this process represents an alternative strategy to escape immune surveillance and the evolutionary pressure inherent in the compact hepadnaviral genome organization.

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