Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) causes a chronic demyelinating disease similar to multiple sclerosis in mice. Although sialic acids have been shown to be essential for TMEV attachment to the host, the surface receptor has not been identified. While type I interferons play a pivotal role in the elimination of the chronic infectious Daniel (DA) strain, the role of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) is controversial. We herein found that TMEV binds to conventional DCs but not to pDCs. A glycomics analysis showed that the sialylated N-glycan fractions were lower in pDCs than in conventional DCs, indicating that pDCs are not susceptible to TMEV infection due to the low levels of sialic acid. TMEV capsid proteins contain an integrin recognition motif, and dot blot assays showed that the integrin proteins bind to TMEV and that the viral binding was reduced in the desialylated α β . α β protein suppressed TMEV replication in vivo, and TMEV co-localized with integrin α at the cell membrane and TLR 3 in the cytoplasm, suggesting that α serves as the viral attachment and entry. These results show that the chronic encephalomyelitis virus utilizes sialylated integrins as cell surface receptors, leading to cellular tropism to evade pDC activation.

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