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    Amino acid substitutions in norovirus VP1 dictate host dissemination via variations in cellular attachment

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    Viruses interact with receptors on the cell surface to initiate and coordinate infection. The distribution of receptors on host cells can be a key determinant of viral tropism and host infection. Unravelling the complex nature of virus-receptor interactions is, therefore, of fundamental importance to understanding viral pathogenesis. Noroviruses are non-enveloped, icosahedral, positive-sense RNA viruses of global importance to human health, with no approved vaccine or antiviral agent available. Here, we use murine norovirus as a model to study the molecular mechanisms of virus-receptor interactions. We show that variation at a single amino acid residue in the major viral capsid protein, VP1 301, has a key impact on the interaction between virus and receptor. This variation did not affect virion replication or virus growth kinetics, but a specific amino acid was rapidly selected through evolution experiments and significantly improved cellular attachment when infecting cells in suspension. However, modulating plasma membrane mobility counteracted this phenotype, suggesting a role for membrane fluidity in norovirus cellular attachment. When the infectivity of a panel of recombinant viruses with single amino acid substitutions at this residue was compared in vivo, there were differences in the tissue distribution of viruses in a murine host, suggesting a role for VP1 301 in dissemination in vivo. Overall, these results highlight how capsid evolution can influence infectivity and dissemination in the host
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