Influenza C virus and bovine coronavirus esterase reveal a similar catalytic mechanism: new insights for drug discovery

  • Mayr, J.
  • Haselhorst, T.
  • Langereis, M.A.
  • Dyason, J.C.
  • Huber, W.
  • Frey, B.
  • Vlasak, R.
  • de Groot, R.J.
  • von Itzstein, M.
Publication date
January 2008

Abstract

Both, the influenza C (INF-C) virus haemagglutinin esterase fusion and bovine coronavirus (BCoV) haemagglutinin esterase surface glycoproteins exhibit a lectin binding capability and a receptor-destroying 9-O-acetyl esterase activity that recognise 9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5,9Ac2)-containing glycans. Here we report nuclear magnetic resonance and molecular modelling studies on the 9-O-acetyl esterase showing that the α-configured Neu5,9Ac2 is strictly preferred by the INF-C and BCoV esterases. Interestingly, we have discovered that the INF-C esterase function releases acetate independently of the chemical nature of the aglycon moiety, whereas subtle differences in substrate recognition were found for BCoV esterase. Analysis of ...

Extracted data

We use cookies to provide a better user experience.