Theta-Defensins Inhibit High-Risk Human Papillomavirus Infection Through Charge-Driven Capsid Clustering

Front Immunol. 2020 Sep 25:11:561843. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.561843. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Persistent infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) genotypes results in a large number of anogenital and head and neck cancers worldwide. Although prophylactic vaccination coverage has improved, there remains a need to develop methods that inhibit viral transmission toward preventing the spread of HPV-driven disease. Defensins are a class of innate immune effector peptides that function to protect hosts from infection by pathogens such as viruses and bacteria. Previous work utilizing α and β defensins from humans has demonstrated that the α-defensin HD5 is effective at inhibiting the most common high-risk genotype, HPV16. A third class of defensin that has yet to be explored are θ-defensins: small, 18-amino acid cyclic peptides found in old-world monkeys whose unique structure makes them both highly cationic and resistant to degradation. Here we show that the prototype θ-defensin, rhesus theta defensin 1, inhibits hrHPV infection through a mechanism involving capsid clustering that inhibits virions from binding to cell surface receptor complexes.

Keywords: alpha-defensins; human papillomavirus; infection; innate-immunology; sexually transmitted infection (STI); theta-defensins.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Alphapapillomavirus / drug effects
  • Alphapapillomavirus / physiology*
  • Alphapapillomavirus / ultrastructure
  • Capsid / metabolism*
  • Capsid Proteins / metabolism
  • Cell Line
  • Cell Membrane / metabolism
  • Cell Membrane / virology
  • Defensins / metabolism*
  • Defensins / pharmacology
  • Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
  • Genome, Viral
  • Genotype
  • Host-Pathogen Interactions*
  • Humans
  • Immunity, Innate
  • Papillomavirus Infections / immunology
  • Papillomavirus Infections / metabolism*
  • Papillomavirus Infections / virology*
  • Peptides, Cyclic / metabolism
  • Protein Binding
  • Virion / ultrastructure
  • alpha-Defensins / metabolism

Substances

  • Capsid Proteins
  • DEFA1A3 protein, human
  • Defensins
  • Peptides, Cyclic
  • alpha-Defensins
  • theta-defensin