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Dive into the research topics where Sheri L. Hanna is active.

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Featured researches published by Sheri L. Hanna.


Journal of Virology | 2006

West Nile Virus Discriminates between DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR for Cellular Attachment and Infection

Carl W. Davis; Hai-Yen Nguyen; Sheri L. Hanna; Melissa D. Sánchez; Robert W. Doms; Theodore C. Pierson

ABSTRACT The C-type lectins DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR bind mannose-rich glycans with high affinity. In vitro, cells expressing these attachment factors efficiently capture, and are infected by, a diverse array of appropriately glycosylated pathogens, including dengue virus. In this study, we investigated whether these lectins could enhance cellular infection by West Nile virus (WNV), a mosquito-borne flavivirus related to dengue virus. We discovered that DC-SIGNR promoted WNV infection much more efficiently than did DC-SIGN, particularly when the virus was grown in human cell types. The presence of a single N-linked glycosylation site on either the prM or E glycoprotein of WNV was sufficient to allow DC-SIGNR-mediated infection, demonstrating that uncleaved prM protein present on a flavivirus virion can influence viral tropism under certain circumstances. Preferential utilization of DC-SIGNR was a specific property conferred by the WNV envelope glycoproteins. Chimeras between DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR demonstrated that the ability of DC-SIGNR to promote WNV infection maps to its carbohydrate recognition domain. WNV virions and subviral particles bound to DC-SIGNR with much greater affinity than DC-SIGN. We believe this is the first report of a pathogen interacting more efficiently with DC-SIGNR than with DC-SIGN. Our results should lead to the discovery of new mechanisms by which these well-studied lectins discriminate among ligands.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

The C-type lectin receptors CLEC-2 and Dectin-1, but not DC-SIGN, signal via a novel YXXL-dependent signaling cascade.

Gemma L.J. Fuller; Jennifer Williams; Michael G. Tomlinson; Johannes A. Eble; Sheri L. Hanna; Stefan Pöhlmann; Katsue Suzuki-Inoue; Yukio Ozaki; Steve P. Watson; Andrew C. Pearce

The two lectin receptors, CLEC-2 and Dectin-1, have been shown to signal through a Syk-dependent pathway, despite the presence of only a single YXXL in their cytosolic tails. In this study, we show that stimulation of CLEC-2 in platelets and in two mutant cell lines is dependent on the YXXL motif and on proteins that participate in signaling by immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif receptors, including Src, Syk, and Tec family kinases, and on phospholipase Cγ. Strikingly, mutation of either Src homology (SH) 2 domain of Syk blocks signaling by CLEC-2 despite the fact that it has only a single YXXL motif. Furthermore, signaling by CLEC-2 is only partially dependent on the BLNK/SLP-76 family of adapter proteins in contrast to that of immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif receptors. The C-type lectin receptor, Dectin-1, which contains a YXXL motif preceded by the same four amino acids as for CLEC-2 (DEDG), signals like CLEC-2 and also requires the two SH2 domains of Syk and is only partially dependent on the BLNK/SLP-76 family of adapters. In marked contrast, the C-type lectin receptor, DC-SIGN, which has a distinct series of amino acids preceding a single YXXL, signals independent of this motif. A mutational analysis of the DEDG sequence of CLEC-2 revealed that the glycine residue directly upstream of the YXXL tyrosine is important for CLEC-2 signaling. These results demonstrate that CLEC-2 and Dectin-1 signal through a single YXXL motif that requires the tandem SH2 domains of Syk but is only partially dependent on the SLP-76/BLNK family of adapters.


Journal of Virology | 2005

N-Linked Glycosylation of West Nile Virus Envelope Proteins Influences Particle Assembly and Infectivity

Sheri L. Hanna; Theodore C. Pierson; Melissa D. Sánchez; Asim A. Ahmed; Mariam M. Murtadha; Robert W. Doms

ABSTRACT West Nile virus (WNV) encodes two envelope proteins, premembrane (prM) and envelope (E). While the prM protein of all WNV strains contains a single N-linked glycosylation site, not all strains contain an N-linked site in the E protein. The presence of N-linked glycosylation on flavivirus E proteins has been linked to virus production, pH sensitivity, and neuroinvasiveness. Therefore, we examined the impact of prM and E glycosylation on WNV assembly and infectivity. Similar to other flaviviruses, expression of WNV prM and E resulted in the release of subviral particles (SVPs). Removing the prM glycosylation site in a lineage I or II strain decreased SVP release, as did removal of the glycosylation site in a lineage I E protein. Addition of the E protein glycosylation site in a lineage II strain that lacked this site increased SVP production. Similar results were obtained in the context of either reporter virus particles (RVPs) or infectious lineage II WNV. RVPs or virions bearing combinations of glycosylated and nonglycosylated forms of prM and E could infect mammalian, avian, and mosquito cells (BHK-21, QT6, and C6/36, respectively). Those particles lacking glycosylation on the E protein were modestly more infectious per genome copy on BHK-21 and QT6 cells, while this absence greatly enhanced the infection of C6/36 cells. Thus, glycosylation of WNV prM and E proteins can affect the efficiency of virus release and infection in a manner that is cell type and perhaps species dependent. This suggests a multifaceted role for envelope N-linked glycosylation in WNV biology and tropism.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2010

Innate antiviral immunity in Drosophila

Leah R. Sabin; Sheri L. Hanna; Sara Cherry

The study of Drosophila, and other genetically tractable insects, has expanded our understanding of innate immunity and more recently antiviral innate mechanisms. The Drosophila antiviral program includes inflammatory signaling cascades as well as antiviral RNA silencing and autophagy. This review will highlight the recent discoveries in antiviral immunity in insects and will reveal some of the lessons learned.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2011

Natural Resistance-Associated Macrophage Protein Is a Cellular Receptor for Sindbis Virus in Both Insect and Mammalian Hosts

Patrick P. Rose; Sheri L. Hanna; Anna Spiridigliozzi; Nattha Wannissorn; Daniel P. Beiting; Susan R. Ross; Richard W. Hardy; Shelly Bambina; Mark T. Heise; Sara Cherry

Alphaviruses, including several emerging human pathogens, are a large family of mosquito-borne viruses with Sindbis virus being a prototypical member of the genus. The host factor requirements and receptors for entry of this class of viruses remain obscure. Using a Drosophila system, we identified the divalent metal ion transporter natural resistance-associated macrophage protein (NRAMP) as a host cell surface molecule required for Sindbis virus binding and entry into Drosophila cells. Consequently, flies mutant for dNRAMP were protected from virus infection. NRAMP2, the ubiquitously expressed vertebrate homolog, mediated binding and infection of Sindbis virus into mammalian cells, and murine cells deficient for NRAMP2 were nonpermissive to infection. Alphavirus glycoprotein chimeras demonstrated that the requirement for NRAMP2 is at the level of Sindbis virus entry. Given the conserved structure of alphavirus glycoproteins, and the widespread use of transporters for viral entry, other alphaviruses may use conserved multipass membrane proteins for infection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

Analysis of the Interaction of Ebola Virus Glycoprotein with DC-SIGN (Dendritic Cell—Specific Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 3—Grabbing Nonintegrin) and Its Homologue DC-SIGNR

Andrea Marzi; Peggy Möller; Sheri L. Hanna; Thomas Harrer; Jutta Eisemann; Alexander Steinkasserer; Stephan Becker; Frédéric Baribaud; Stefan Pöhlmann

Abstract Background. The lectin DC-SIGN (dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3-grabbing nonintegrin) augments Ebola virus (EBOV) infection. However, it its unclear whether DC-SIGN promotes only EBOV attachment (attachment factor function, nonessential) or actively facilitates EBOV entry (receptor function, essential). Methods. We investigated whether DC-SIGN on B cell lines and dendritic cells acts as an EBOV attachment factor or receptor. Results. Engineered DC-SIGN expression rendered some B cell lines susceptible to EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV GP)-driven infection, whereas others remained refractory, suggesting that cellular factors other than DC-SIGN are also required for susceptibility to EBOV infection. Augmentation of entry was independent of efficient DCSIGN internalization and might not involve lectin-mediated endocytic uptake of virions. Therefore, DC-SIGN is unlikely to function as an EBOV receptor on B cell lines; instead, it might concentrate virions onto cells, thereby allowing entry into cell lines expressing low levels of endogenous receptor(s). Indeed, artificial concentration of virions onto cells mirrored DC-SIGN expression, confirming that optimization of viral attachment is sufficient for EBOV GP-driven entry into some B cell lines. Finally, EBOV infection of dendritic cells was only partially dependent on mannose-specific lectins, such as DC-SIGN, suggesting an important contribution of other factors. Conclusions. Our results indicate that DC-SIGN is not an EBOV receptor but, rather, is an attachmentpromoting factor that boosts entry into B cell lines susceptible to low levels of EBOV GP-mediated infection.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Genome-wide RNAi screen identifies broadly-acting host factors that inhibit arbovirus infection

Ari Yasunaga; Sheri L. Hanna; Jianqing Li; Hyelim Cho; Patrick P. Rose; Anna Spiridigliozzi; Beth Gold; Michael S. Diamond; Sara Cherry

Vector-borne viruses are an important class of emerging and re-emerging pathogens; thus, an improved understanding of the cellular factors that modulate infection in their respective vertebrate and insect hosts may aid control efforts. In particular, cell-intrinsic antiviral pathways restrict vector-borne viruses including the type I interferon response in vertebrates and the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway in insects. However, it is likely that additional cell-intrinsic mechanisms exist to limit these viruses. Since insects rely on innate immune mechanisms to inhibit virus infections, we used Drosophila as a model insect to identify cellular factors that restrict West Nile virus (WNV), a flavivirus with a broad and expanding geographical host range. Our genome-wide RNAi screen identified 50 genes that inhibited WNV infection. Further screening revealed that 17 of these genes were antiviral against additional flaviviruses, and seven of these were antiviral against other vector-borne viruses, expanding our knowledge of invertebrate cell-intrinsic immunity. Investigation of two newly identified factors that restrict diverse viruses, dXPO1 and dRUVBL1, in the Tip60 complex, demonstrated they contributed to antiviral defense at the organismal level in adult flies, in mosquito cells, and in mammalian cells. These data suggest the existence of broadly acting and functionally conserved antiviral genes and pathways that restrict virus infections in evolutionarily divergent hosts.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Rift Valley Fever Virus Infection of Human Cells and Insect Hosts Is Promoted by Protein Kinase C Epsilon

Claire Marie Filone; Sheri L. Hanna; M. Cecilia Caino; Shelly Bambina; Robert W. Doms; Sara Cherry

As an arthropod-borne human pathogen, Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) cycles between an insect vector and mammalian hosts. Little is known about the cellular requirements for infection in either host. Here we developed a tissue culture model for RVFV infection of human and insect cells that is amenable to high-throughput screening. Using this approach we screened a library of 1280 small molecules with pharmacologically defined activities and identified 59 drugs that inhibited RVFV infection with 15 inhibiting RVFV replication in both human and insect cells. Amongst the 15 inhibitors that blocked infection in both hosts was a subset that inhibits protein kinase C. Further studies found that infection is dependent upon the novel protein kinase C isozyme epsilon (PKCε) in both human and insect cells as well as in adult flies. Altogether, these data show that inhibition of cellular factors required for early steps in the infection cycle including PKCε can block RVFV infection, and may represent a starting point for the development of anti-RVFV therapeutics.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Function of Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 gD Mutants with Different Receptor-Binding Affinities in Virus Entry and Fusion

Richard S. B. Milne; Sheri L. Hanna; Sharon H. Willis; Gary H. Cohen; Roselyn J. Eisenberg

ABSTRACT We have studied the receptor-specific function of four linker-insertion mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 glycoprotein D (gD) representing each of the functional regions of gD. We used biosensor analysis to measure binding of the gD mutants to the receptors HVEM (HveA) and nectin-1 (HveC). One of the mutants, gD(∇34t), failed to bind HVEMt but showed essentially wild-type (WT) affinity for nectin-1t. The receptor-binding kinetics and affinities of the other three gD mutants varied over a 1,000-fold range, but each mutant had the same affinity for both receptors. All of the mutants were functionally impaired in virus entry and cell fusion, and the levels of activity were strikingly similar in these two assays. gD(∇34)-containing virus was defective on HVEM-expressing cells but did enter nectin-1-expressing cells to about 60% of WT levels. This showed that the defect of this form of gD on HVEM-expressing cells was primarily one of binding and that this was separable from its later function in virus entry. gD(∇243t) showed WT binding affinity for both receptors, but virus containing this form of gD had a markedly reduced rate of entry, suggesting that gD(∇243) is impaired in a postbinding step in the entry process. There was no correlation between gD mutant activity in fusion or virus entry and receptor-binding affinity. We conclude that gD functions in virus entry and cell fusion regardless of its receptor-binding kinetics and that as long as binding to a functional receptor occurs, entry will progress.


Cell Reports | 2013

Genome-wide RNAi screen identifies SEC61A and VCP as conserved regulators of Sindbis virus entry

Debasis Panda; Patrick P. Rose; Sheri L. Hanna; Beth Gold; Kaycie C. Hopkins; Randolph B. Lyde; Michael S. Marks; Sara Cherry

Alphaviruses are a large class of insect-borne human pathogens and little is known about the host-factor requirements for infection. To identify such factors, we performed a genome-wide RNAi screen using model Drosophila cells and validated 94 genes that impacted infection of Sindbis virus (SINV), the prototypical alphavirus. We identified a conserved role for SEC61A and valosin-containing protein (VCP) in facilitating SINV entry in insects and mammals. SEC61A and VCP selectively regulate trafficking of the entry receptor NRAMP2, and loss or pharmacological inhibition of these proteins leads to altered NRAMP2 trafficking to lysosomal compartments and proteolytic digestion within lysosomes. NRAMP2 is the major iron transporter in cells, and loss of NRAMP2 attenuates intracellular iron transport. Thus, this study reveals genes and pathways involved in both infection and iron homeostasis that may serve as targets for antiviral therapeutics or for iron-imbalance disorders.

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Robert W. Doms

University of Pennsylvania

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Sara Cherry

University of Pennsylvania

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Theodore C. Pierson

National Institutes of Health

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Patrick P. Rose

University of Pennsylvania

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Asim A. Ahmed

Boston Children's Hospital

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Beth Gold

University of Pennsylvania

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Bridget A. Puffer

University of Pennsylvania

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Carl W. Davis

University of Pennsylvania

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