Virus Details


VHFID3955

Pathogen Information

Virus Name Human astrovirus
Virus Short Name HAstV
Order Nidovirales
Virus Family Astroviridae
Virus Subfamily N.A.
Genus Mamastrovirus
Species Human astrovirus
Host Human, mammals
Cell Tropism Enterocytes
Associated Disease Infantile gastroenteritis
Mode of Transmission Fecal-oral
VIPR DB link N.A.
ICTV DB link https://talk.ictvonline.org/ictv-reports/ictv_9th_report/positive-sense-rna-viruses-2011/w/posrna_viruses/247/astroviridae
Virus Host DB link N.A.

Publication Information

Paper Title Characterization of human Aastrovirus cell entry
Author's Name Ernesto Mendez, Claudia Munoz-Yanez, Claudia Sanchez-San Martin, Gabriela Aguirre-Crespo, M. del Rocio Banos-Lara, Michelle Gutierrez, Rafaela Espinosa, Yunuen Acevedo, Carlos F. Arias, Susana Lopez
Journal Name JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Pubmed ID 24335315
Abstract Human astroviruses (HAstV) are a frequent cause of gastroenteritis in young children and immunocompromised patients. To understand the early steps of HAstV infection in the highly permissive Caco-2 cell line, the binding and entry processes of the virus were characterized. The half-time of virus binding to the cell surface was about 10 min, while virus decapsidation took around 130 min. Drugs affecting clathrin-mediated endocytosis, endosome acidification, and actin filament polymerization, as well as those that reduce the presence of cholesterol in the cell membrane, decreased the infectivity of the virus. The infection was also reduced by silencing the expression of the clathrin heavy chain (CHC) by RNA interference or by overexpression of dominant-negative mutants of dynamin 2 and Eps15. Furthermore, the entry of HAstV apparently depends on the maturation of endosomes, since the infection was reduced by silencing the expression of Rab7, a small GTPase involved in the early- to late-endosome maturation. Altogether, our results suggest that HAstV enters Caco-2 cells using a clathrin-dependent pathway and reaches late endosomes to enter cells. Here, we have characterized the mechanism used by human astroviruses, important agents of gastroenteritis in children, to gain entry into their host cells. Using a combination of biochemical and genetic tools, we found that these viruses enter Caco-2 cells using a clathrin-dependent endocytic pathway, where they most likely need to travel to late endosomes to reach the cytoplasm and begin their replication cycle.
Used Model Caco-2 cells
DOI 10.1128/JVI.02908-13