Author:
Zhang Zheng,Zhu Zhaozhong,Chen Wenjun,Cai Zena,Xu Beibei,Tan Zhiying,Wu Aiping,Ge Xingyi,Guo Xinhong,Tan Zhongyang,Xia Zanxian,Zhu Haizhen,Jiang Taijiao,Peng Yousong
Abstract
AbstractReceptor mediated entry is the first step for viral infection. However, the relationship between viruses and receptors is still obscure. Here, by manually curating a high-quality database of 268 pairs of mammalian virus-host receptor interaction, which included 128 unique viral species or sub-species and 119 virus receptors, we found the viral receptors were structurally and functionally diverse, yet they had several common features when compared to other cell membrane proteins: more protein domains, higher level of N-glycosylation, higher ratio of self-interaction and more interaction partners, and higher expression in most tissues of the host. Additionally, the receptors used by the same virus tended to co-evolve. Further correlation analysis between viral receptors and the tissue and host specificity of the virus shows that the virus receptor similarity was a significant predictor for mammalian virus cross-species. This work could deepen our understanding towards the viral receptor selection and help evaluate the risk of viral zoonotic diseases.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory