Ability of the encephalitic arbovirus Semliki Forest virus to cross the blood brain barrier is determined by the charge of the E2 glycoprotein

Semliki Forest virus (SFV) provides a well-characterized model system to study the pathogenesis of virus encephalitis. Several studies have used virus derived from the molecular clone SFV4. SFV4 virus does not have the same phenotype as the closely related L10 or the prototype virus from which its molecular clone was derived. In mice, L10 generates a high titer plasma viremia, is efficiently neuroinvasive and produces a fatal panencephalitis. Whereas, low dose SFV4 produces a low titer viremia, rarely enters the brain and is generally avirulent. To determine the genetic differences responsible, the consensus sequence of L10 was determined and compared to SFV4. There were twelve nucleotide differences, six were non-synonymous; these were engineered into a new molecular clone, termed SFV6. The derived virus, SFV6, generated a high titer viremia and was efficiently neuroinvasive and virulent. The phenotypic difference mapped to a single aa residue at position 162 in the E2 envelope glycoprotein; lysine in SFV4, glutamic acid in SFV6. Analysis of the L10 virus showed it contained different plaque phenotypes which differed in virulence. A lysine at E2 247 conferred a small plaque avirulent phenotype and glutamic acid a large plaque virulent phenotype. Viruses with a positively charged lysine at E2 162 or 247 were more reliant on glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) to enter cells and were selected for by passage in BHK-21 cells. Interestingly, viruses with the greatest reliance on binding to GAGs replicated to higher titers in the brain and more efficiently crossed an in vitro blood-brain barrier (BBB).

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