Litcius/Paper detail

A Potent Postentry Restriction to Primate Lentiviruses in a Yinpterochiropteran Bat

James H. Morrison, Caitlin M. Miller, Laura Bankers, Gary Crameri, Lin‐Fa Wang, Eric M. Poeschla

2020mBio19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic suggests that bat innate immune systems are insufficiently characterized relative to the medical importance of these animals. Retroviruses, e.g., HIV-1, can be severe pathogens when they cross species barriers, and bat restrictions corresponding to retroviruses are comparatively unstudied. Here, we compared the abilities of retroviruses from three genera ( Lentivirus , Gammaretrovirus , and Spumavirus ) to infect cells of the large fruit-eating bat P. alecto and other mammals. We identified a major, specific postentry restriction to primate lentiviruses. HIV-1 and SIVmac are potently blocked at early life cycle steps, but nonprimate lentiviruses and foamy retroviruses are entirely unrestricted. Despite acting postentry and in a CypA-dependent manner with features reminiscent of antiretroviral factors from other mammals, this restriction was not saturable with virus-like particles and was independent of P. alecto TRIM5, TRIM21, TRIM22, TRIM34, and MX2. These results identify a novel restriction and highlight cyclophilin-capsid interactions as ancient species-specific determinants of retroviral infection.

Topics & Concepts

GammaretrovirusBiologyVirologyCapsidLentivirusInnate immune systemVirusDesmodus rotundusFlatwormRetrovirusImmune systemGeneticsZoologyViral diseaseRabiesinterferon and immune responsesHIV Research and TreatmentCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research