Newcastle disease virus (NDV)-induced membrane fusion requires an interaction between the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) attachment and the fusion (F) proteins, triggered by HNs binding to receptors.NDV HN has two sialic acid binding sites: site I, which also mediates neuraminidase activity, and site II, which straddles the membrane-distal end of the dimer interface. By characterizing the effect on receptor binding avidity and F-interactive capability of HN dimer interface mutations, we present evidence consistent with (i) receptor engagement by site I triggering the interaction with F and (ii) site II functioning to maintain high-avidity receptor binding during the fusion process.Newcastle disease virus (NDV) is a member of the Paramyxoviridae family of negative-strand RNA viruses (12). These viruses enter and spread between cells by virus-cell and cell-cell fusion, respectively, triggered by receptor binding. However, receptor binding and fusion are mediated by two different glycoproteins, the attachment and fusion (F) proteins, respectively, requiring a mechanism by which the two processes can be linked. This is accomplished by a virus-specific interaction between the two proteins (9,10,13,19).The ectodomain of paramyxovirus attachment proteins, including the NDV hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN), consists of a long stalk connected to a terminal globular domain (12). Whereas the HN globular domain mediates binding to sialic acid receptors, the stalk mediates the interaction with the homologous F protein (5,15,16). However, the mechanism by which receptor binding triggers fusion is not well understood. The globular head consists of a six-bladed -sheet propeller with a centrally located sialic acid binding site (site I) that also mediates neuraminidase (NA) activity (4). Many mutations in this site, including K236R, abolish receptor binding, NA, and fusion (7), as well as the ability of HN to interact with F at the cell surface (14). These findings, along with the results of bimolecular complementation studies (2), are consistent with HN and F promoting fusion by the provocateur (2) mechanism, which asserts that the HN-F interaction is triggered at the surface by receptor binding. Takimoto et al. (20) identified several mutations in the dimer interface of NDV HN that severely compromised fusion promotion. Subsequently, we showed that the fusion deficiency resulting from many of these mutations in the membraneproximal region of the interface, e.g., F220A and -N and S222A, -K, -N, and -T, correlated with impaired hemadsorption (HAd) activity at 37°C, despite wild-type (wt) NA activity (3). Modeling of this domain indicated that these mutations disrupted intermonomeric hydrogen bonds critical to the integrity of the dimer interface (3).A second sialic acid binding site (site II) was subsequently identified at the membrane-distal end of the interface that is composed of residues from both monomers (21) and is proposed (1) to maintain the target membrane in close proximity during fusion. Here, we test the hypothe...