Nature Communications (Aug 2024)

The neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) is a pan-arterivirus receptor

  • Teressa M. Shaw,
  • Devra Huey,
  • Makky Mousa-Makky,
  • Jared Compaleo,
  • Kylie Nennig,
  • Aadit P. Shah,
  • Fei Jiang,
  • Xueer Qiu,
  • Devon Klipsic,
  • Raymond R. R. Rowland,
  • Igor I. Slukvin,
  • Meagan E. Sullender,
  • Megan T. Baldridge,
  • Haichang Li,
  • Cody J. Warren,
  • Adam L. Bailey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51142-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Arteriviruses infect a variety of mammalian hosts, but the receptors used by these viruses to enter cells are poorly understood. We identified the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) as an important pro-viral host factor via comparative genome-wide CRISPR-knockout screens with multiple arteriviruses. Using a panel of cell lines and divergent arteriviruses, we demonstrate that FcRn is required for the entry step of arterivirus infection and serves as a molecular barrier to arterivirus cross-species infection. We also show that FcRn synergizes with another known arterivirus entry factor, CD163, to mediate arterivirus entry. Overexpression of FcRn and CD163 sensitizes non-permissive cells to infection and enables the culture of fastidious arteriviruses. Treatment of multiple cell lines with a pre-clinical anti-FcRn monoclonal antibody blocked infection and rescued cells from arterivirus-induced death. Altogether, this study identifies FcRn as a novel pan-arterivirus receptor, with implications for arterivirus emergence, cross-species infection, and host-directed pan-arterivirus countermeasure development.