4.6 Article

Norovirus-binding proteins recovered from activated sludge micro-organisms with an affinity to a noroviral capsid peptide

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 109, Issue 6, Pages 1923-1928

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2672.2010.04821.x

Keywords

activated sludge micro-organisms; affinity chromatography; hydrophobic interaction; norovirus; virus-binding protein; virus-like particle

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)

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Aims: Transmission routes of noroviruses, leading aetiological agents of acute gastroenteritis, are rarely verified when outbreaks occur. Because the destination of norovirus particles being firmly captured by micro-organisms could be totally different from that of those particles moving freely, micro-organisms with natural affinity ligands such as virus-binding proteins would affect the fate of viruses in environment, if such microbial affinity ligands exist. The aim of this study is to identify norovirus-binding proteins (NoVBPs) that are presumably working as natural ligands for norovirus particles in water environments. Methods and Results: NoVBPs were recovered from activated sludge microorganisms by an affinity chromatography technique in which a capsid peptide of norovirus genogroup II (GII) was immobilized. The recovered NoVBPs bind to norovirus-like particles (NoVLPs) of norovirus GII, and this adsorption was stronger than that to NoVLPs of norovirus genogroup I. The profile of two-dimensional electrophoresis of NoVBPs showed that the recovered NoVBPs included at least seven spots of protein. The determination of N-terminal amino acid sequences of these NoVBPs revealed that hydrophobic interactions could contribute to the adsorption between NoVBPs and norovirus particles. Conclusions: NoVBPs conferring a high affinity to norovirus GII were successfully isolated from activated sludge micro-organisms. Significance and Impact of the Study: NoVBPs could be natural viral ligands and play an important role in the NoV transmission.

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