Ana Valero-Rello, Carlos Baeza-Delgado, Iván Andreu-Moreno, Rafael Sanjuán
PLoS pathogens 2024 FebThe interaction of viral surface components with cellular receptors and other entry factors determines key features of viral infection such as host range, tropism and virulence. Despite intensive research, our understanding of these interactions remains limited. Here, we report a systematic analysis of published work on mammalian virus receptors and attachment factors. We build a dataset twice the size of those available to date and specify the role of each factor in virus entry. We identify cellular proteins that are preferentially used as virus receptors, which tend to be plasma membrane proteins with a high propensity to interact with other proteins. Using machine learning, we assign cell surface proteins a score that predicts their ability to function as virus receptors. Our results also reveal common patterns of receptor usage among viruses and suggest that enveloped viruses tend to use a broader repertoire of alternative receptors than non-enveloped viruses, a feature that might confer them with higher interspecies transmissibility. Copyright: © 2024 Valero-Rello et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Ana Valero-Rello, Carlos Baeza-Delgado, Iván Andreu-Moreno, Rafael Sanjuán. Cellular receptors for mammalian viruses. PLoS pathogens. 2024 Feb;20(2):e1012021
PMID: 38377111
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