GII.6 norovirus major capsid protein VP1 derived from distinct clusters induce cross-blocking effects.

Infect Genet Evol

Affiliated Infectious Diseases Hospital of Zhengzhou University (Henan Infectious Diseases Hospital, The Sixth People's Hospital of Zhengzhou), Center for Translational Medicine, Zhengzhou 450000, People's Republic of China. Electronic address:

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • GII.6 norovirus shows less variation in its major capsid protein VP1 compared to GII.4, which the study investigates across three distinct GII.6 strains.
  • The team expressed VP1 using a recombinant system and analyzed it through various methods, including mass spectrometry, to characterize its molecular properties and binding abilities.
  • Results indicated similar binding capabilities among the different GII.6 strains with observed cross-blocking effects, implying fewer strains may be necessary for effective vaccine development against norovirus.

Article Abstract

Unlike pandemic GII.4 norovirus, GII.6 norovirus shows limited sequence variation in its major capsid protein VP1. In this study, we investigated the VP1 expression profiles, binding abilities, and cross-blocking effects of three GII.6 norovirus strains derived from three distinct variants. Norovirus VP1 was expressed using a recombinant baculovirus expression system and characterized by transmission electron microscopy, mass spectrometry, salivary histo-blood group antigen (HBGA)-virus like particles (VLPs) binding and binding blockade assays. Mass spectrometry revealed the expected molecular weight (MW) of full-length proteins and degraded or cleaved fragments of all three VP1 proteins. Peptide mapping showed loss of 2 and 3 amino acids from the N- and C-terminus, respectively. Further, the co-expression of VP1 and VP2 proteins did not lead to extra fragmentation during mass spectrometry. Salivary HBGA-VLP binding assay revealed similar binding patterns of the three GII.6 VP1 proteins. Salivary HBGA-VLP binding blockade assay induced cross-blocking effects. Our results demonstrate similar binding abilities against salivary HBGAs and specific cross-blocking effects for GII.6 norovirus strains derived from distinct variants, suggesting that fewer GII.6 strains from different evolutionary variants are needed for the development of norovirus vaccines.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.meegid.2024.105617DOI Listing

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