A novel glycoform of the rotavirus outer capsid protein VP7 is secreted from polarized cells and activates innate immune cells
Ashley Nutsford, The Huong Chau, Carol Wang, Ash Sargent, Camren Cullen, Thomas Reilly, Morten Thaysen-Andersen, Anna E. S. Brooks, John A. Taylor

TL;DR
A new form of the rotavirus protein VP7 is secreted from cells and activates immune cells, suggesting a role in immune response modulation.
Contribution
Discovery of a novel glycosylated form of VP7 secreted from polarized cells with immune-modulating properties.
Findings
A novel glycoform of VP7 is secreted independently of virions and has complex N- and O-glycans.
Secreted VP7 activates TLR2 and TLR4 and stimulates innate immune cells.
sVP7 retains trimeric structure and neutralizing epitopes despite secretion.
Abstract
Rotaviruses (RVs) are unique among non-enveloped animal viruses encoding a structural and a nonstructural glycoprotein in their genome. The outer capsid of the virion is formed by 260 trimers of VP7, which is glycosylated at an asparagine residue(s) in the endoplasmic reticulum of infected cells, where it is retained until a late stage of virion morphogenesis. We investigated the fate of VP7 produced during synchronous infection of polarized Caco-2 cells and observed that a previously undetected form with a molecular weight greater than virion-associated VP7 was secreted into the medium. This secreted form of VP7 (sVP7) was not associated with virions and was insensitive to endoglycosidase H treatment consistent with the dominance of complex type N-glycans revealed in structural details using LC-MS/MS. We also detected core 1 and 2-type O-glycans on sVP7 contributing to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Viral Infections and Outbreaks Research · Respiratory viral infections research
