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It is generally accepted that human influenza viruses bind glycans containing sialic acid linked α2–6 to the next sugar, that avian influenza viruses bind glycans containing the α2–3 linkage, and that mutations that change the binding specificity might change the host tropism. We noted that human H3N2 viruses showed dramatic differences in their binding specificity, and so we embarked on a study of representative human H3N2 influenza viruses, isolated from 1968 to 2012, that had been isolated and minimally passaged only in mammalian cells, never in eggs. The 45 viruses were grown in MDCK cells, purified, fluorescently labeled and screened on the Consortium for Functional Glycomics Glycan Array. Viruses isolated in the same season have similar binding specificity profiles but the profiles show marked year-to-year variation. None of the 610 glycans on the array (166 sialylated glycans) bound to all viruses; the closest was Neu5Acα2–6(Galβ1–4GlcNAc)3 in either a linear or biantennary form, that bound 42 of the 45 viruses. The earliest human H3N2 viruses preferentially bound short, branched sialylated glycans while recent viruses bind better to long polylactosamine chains terminating in sialic acid. Viruses isolated in 1996, 2006, 2010 and 2012 bind glycans with α2–3 linked sialic acid; for 2006, 2010 and 2012 viruses this binding was inhibited by oseltamivir, indicating binding of α2–3 sialylated glycans by neuraminidase. More significantly, oseltamivir inhibited virus entry of 2010 and 2012 viruses into MDCK cells. All of these viruses were representative of epidemic strains that spread around the world, so all could infect and transmit between humans with high efficiency. We conclude that the year-to-year variation in receptor binding specificity is a consequence of amino acid sequence changes driven by antigenic drift, and that viruses with quite different binding specificity and avidity are equally fit to infect and transmit in the human population.  相似文献   

3.
Influenza A viruses, members of the Orthomyxoviridae family, are responsible for annual seasonal influenza epidemics and occasional global pandemics. The binding of viral coat glycoprotein hemagglutinin (HA) to sialylated glycan receptors on host epithelial cells is the critical initial step in the infection and transmission of these viruses. Scientists believe that a switch in the binding specificity of HA from Neu5Acα2-3Gal linked (α2-3) to Neu5Acα2-6Gal linked (α2-6) glycans is essential for the crossover of the viruses from avian to human hosts. However, studies have shown that the classification of glycan binding preference of HA based on sialic acid linkage alone is insufficient to establish a correlation between receptor specificity of HA and the efficient transmission of influenza A viruses. A recent study reported extensive diversity in the structure and composition of α2-6 glycans (which goes beyond the sialic acid linkage) in human upper respiratory epithelia and identified different glycan structural topologies. Biochemical examination of the multivalent HA binding to these diverse sialylated glycan structures also demonstrated that high affinity binding of HA to α2-6 glycans with a characteristic umbrella-like structural topology is critical for efficient human adaptation and human-human transmission of influenza A viruses. This review summarizes studies which suggest a new paradigm for understanding the role of the structure of sialylated glycan receptors in influenza virus pathogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Interspecies transmission (host switching/jumping) of influenza viruses is a key scientific question that must be addressed. In addition to the vigorous research on highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIVs), studies of the mechanism of interspecies transmission of low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses (LPAIVs) could also provide insights into host tropism and virulence evolution. Influenza A viruses harboring hemagglutinin (HA) H13 (e.g., H13N6) are LPAIVs. In this study, soluble H13 HA glycoprotein was purified, and its receptor binding activity was characterized. The results revealed that H13 exclusively binds the avian α2-3-linked sialic acid receptor; no binding to the mammalian α2-6-linked sialic acid receptor was detected. Furthermore, the molecular basis of the H13 receptor binding specificity was revealed by comparative analysis of the crystal structures of both receptor-bound H13 and H5 HAs, which might be contributed by the hydrophobic residue V186. Work with an H13N186 mutant confirmed the importance of V186 in the receptor binding specificity of H13 HA, which shows that the mutant protein reduced the binding of an avian receptor analog but increased the binding of a human receptor analog. Detailed structural analysis also demonstrated that the conserved binding sites of the recently well-studied broadly neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies targeting the HA2 domain are found in H13. Our results expand our understanding of virulence evolution, receptor binding preference, and species tropism of the LPAIVs and HPAIVs.  相似文献   

5.
In the context of recently emerged novel influenza strains through reassortment, avian influenza subtypes such as H5N1, H7N7, H7N2, H7N3 and H9N2 pose a constant threat in terms of their adaptation to the human host. Among these subtypes, it was recently demonstrated that mutations in H5 and H9 hemagglutinin (HA) in the context of lab-generated reassorted viruses conferred aerosol transmissibility in ferrets (a property shared by human adapted viruses). We previously demonstrated that the quantitative binding affinity of HA to α2→6 sialylated glycans (human receptors) is one of the important factors governing human adaptation of HA. Although the H7 subtype has infected humans causing varied clinical outcomes from mild conjunctivitis to severe respiratory illnesses, it is not clear where the HA of these subtypes stand in regard to human adaptation since its binding affinity to glycan receptors has not yet been quantified. In this study, we have quantitatively characterized the glycan receptor-binding specificity of HAs from representative strains of Eurasian (H7N7) and North American (H7N2) lineages that have caused human infection. Furthermore, we have demonstrated for the first time that two specific mutations; Gln226→Leu and Gly228→Ser in glycan receptor-binding site of H7 HA substantially increase its binding affinity to human receptor. Our findings contribute to a framework for monitoring the evolution of H7 HA to be able to adapt to human host.  相似文献   

6.
Influenza viruses of gallinaceous poultry and wild aquatic birds usually have distinguishable receptor-binding properties. Here we used a panel of synthetic sialylglycopolymers and solid-phase receptor-binding assays to characterize receptor-binding profiles of about 70 H7 influenza viruses isolated from aquatic birds, land-based poultry, and horses in Eurasia and America. Unlike typical duck influenza viruses with non-H7 hemagglutinin (HA), all avian H7 influenza viruses, irrespective of the host species, displayed a poultry-virus-like binding specificity, i.e., preferential binding to sulfated oligosaccharides Neu5Acα2-3Galβ1-4(6-O-HSO(3))GlcNAc and Neu5Acα2-3Galβ1-4(Fucα1-3)(6-O-HSO(3))GlcNAc. This phenotype correlated with the unique amino acid sequence of the amino acid 185 to 189 loop of H7 HA and seemed to be dependent on ionic interactions between the sulfate group of the receptor and Lys193 and on the lack of sterical clashes between the fucose residue and Gln222. Many North American and Eurasian H7 influenza viruses displayed weak but detectable binding to the human-type receptor moiety Neu5Acα2-6Galβ1-4GlcNAc, highlighting the potential of H7 influenza viruses for avian-to-human transmission. Equine H7 influenza viruses differed from other viruses by preferential binding to the N-glycolyl form of sialic acid. Our data suggest that the receptor-binding site of contemporary H7 influenza viruses in aquatic and terrestrial birds was formed after the introduction of their common precursor from ducks to a new host, presumably, gallinaceous poultry. The uniformity of the receptor-binding profile of H7 influenza viruses in various wild and domestic birds indicates that there is no strong receptor-mediated host range restriction in birds on viruses with this HA subtype. This notion agrees with repeated interspecies transmission of H7 influenza viruses from aquatic birds to poultry.  相似文献   

7.
Influenza virus neuraminidase (NA) cleaves off sialic acid from cellular receptors of hemagglutinin (HA) to enable progeny escape from infected cells. However, NA variants (D151G) of recent human H3N2 viruses have also been reported to bind receptors on red blood cells, but the nature of these receptors and the effect of the mutation on NA activity were not established. Here, we compare the functional and structural properties of a human H3N2 NA from A/Tanzania/205/2010 and its D151G mutant, which supports HA-independent receptor binding. While the wild-type NA efficiently cleaves sialic acid from both α2-6- and α2-3-linked glycans, the mutant exhibits much reduced enzymatic activity toward both types of sialosides. Conversely, while wild-type NA shows no detectable binding to sialosides, the D151G NA exhibits avid binding with broad specificity toward α2-3 sialosides. D151G NA binds the 3′ sialyllactosamine (3′-SLN) and 6′-SLN sialosides with equilibrium dissociation constant (KD) values of 30.0 μM and 645 μM, respectively, which correspond to much higher affinities than the corresponding affinities (low mM) of HA to these glycans. Crystal structures of wild-type and mutant NAs reveal the structural basis for glycan binding in the active site by exclusively impairing the glycosidic bond hydrolysis step. The general significance of D151 among influenza virus NAs was further explored by introducing the D151G mutation into three N1 NAs and one N2 NA, which all exhibited reduced enzymatic activity and preferential binding to α2-3 sialosides. Since the enzymatic and binding activities of NAs are not routinely assessed, the potential for NA receptor binding to contribute to influenza virus biology may be underappreciated.  相似文献   

8.
Do the complexity and the bulkiness of a protein affect the affinity between protein and ligand? We attempted to investigate this problem by using ab initio fragment molecular orbital (FMO) method to calculate the binding energy between human influenza viral hemagglutinin (HA) and human oligo-saccharide receptor. We compared the binding energies of 4 different sizes of human A virus HA H3 subtype complexed with human receptor Neu5Ac(alpha2-6)Gal as a model. The full shape receptor binding domain complexed with Neu5Ac(alpha2-6)Gal had the highest binding energy 170.3kcal/mol at the FMO-HF/STO-3G level, which was 52.3kcal/mol higher than that of the smallest domain-receptor complex. These data provide the consideration of the backyard bulkiness beyond the binding site of protein to the protein-ligand stability.  相似文献   

9.
Avian influenza subtypes such as H5, H7 and H9 are yet to adapt to the human host so as to establish airborne transmission between humans. However, lab-generated reassorted viruses possessing hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) genes from an avian H9 isolate and other genes from a human-adapted (H3 or H1) subtype acquired two amino acid changes in HA and a single amino acid change in NA that confer respiratory droplet transmission in ferrets. We previously demonstrated for human-adapted H1, H2 and H3 subtypes that quantitative binding affinity of their HA to α2→6 sialylated glycan receptors correlates with respiratory droplet transmissibility of the virus in ferrets. Such a relationship remains to be established for H9 HA. In this study, we performed a quantitative biochemical characterization of glycan receptor binding properties of wild-type and mutant forms of representative H9 HAs that were previously used in context of reassorted viruses in ferret transmission studies. We demonstrate here that distinct molecular interactions in the glycan receptor-binding site of different H9 HAs affect the glycan-binding specificity and affinity. Further we show that α2→6 glycan receptor-binding affinity of a mutant H9 HA carrying Thr-189→Ala amino acid change correlates with the respiratory droplet transmission in ferrets conferred by this change. Our findings contribute to a framework for monitoring the evolution of H9 HA by understanding effects of molecular changes in HA on glycan receptor-binding properties.  相似文献   

10.
Sialyl-linkage specificity of sialidases of the human influenza A virus strains, A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2) and A/PR/8/34 (H1N1) were studied using natural and synthetic gangliosides. The sialidase of the A/Aichi/2/68 strain hydrolyzed the terminal Neu5Acalpha2-3Gal sequence but not the Neu5Acalpha2-3 linkage on the inner Gal of GM1a, which is a ganglioside that has the gangliotetraose chain (Galbeta1-3GalNAcbeta1-4- (Neu5Acalpha2-3)Galbeta1++ +-4Glcbeta1-Cer). The sialidase hydrolyzed the Neu5Ac on the inner Gal of GM2, which had a shorter gangliotriose chain. GM4, which had the shortest chain (Neu5Acalpha2-3Galbeta1-Cer) of the gangliosides, had a lower substrate specificity. The N1 and N2 sialidase subtypes of the human influenza A virus had no significant variation in their substrate specificity for the gangliosides. Analysis of 11 synthetic gangliosides, which contained various ceramide or sialic acid moieties, demonstrated that A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2) sialidase recognized the ceramide and sialic acid moiety and the length and structure of the sialyl sugar chain.   相似文献   

11.
Despite substantial efforts to control and contain H5N1 influenza viruses, bird flu viruses continue to spread and evolve. Neutralizing antibodies against conserved epitopes on the viral hemagglutinin (HA) could confer immunity to the diverse H5N1 virus strains and provide information for effective vaccine design. Here, we report the characterization of a broadly neutralizing murine monoclonal antibody, H5M9, to most H5N1 clades and subclades that was elicited by immunization with viral HA of A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96 (H5N1), the immediate precursor of the current dominant strains of H5N1 viruses. The crystal structures of the Fab′ fragment of H5M9 in complexes with H5 HAs of A/Vietnam/1203/2004 and A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96 reveal a conserved epitope in the HA1 vestigial esterase subdomain that is some distance from the receptor binding site and partially overlaps antigenic site C of H3 HA. Further epitope characterization by selection of escape mutants and epitope mapping by flow cytometry analysis of site-directed mutagenesis of HA with a yeast cell surface display identified four residues that are critical for H5M9 binding. D53, Y274, E83a, and N276 are all conserved in H5N1 HAs and are not in H5 epitopes identified by other mouse or human antibodies. Antibody H5M9 is effective in protection of H5N1 virus both prophylactically and therapeutically and appears to neutralize by blocking both virus receptor binding and postattachment steps. Thus, the H5M9 epitope identified here should provide valuable insights into H5N1 vaccine design and improvement, as well as antibody-based therapies for treatment of H5N1 infection.  相似文献   

12.
Natural killer (NK) cells serve as a crucial first-line defense against tumors and virus-infected cells. We previously showed that lysis of influenza virus (IV)-infected cells is mediated by the interaction between the NK receptor, NKp46, and the IV hemagglutinin (HA) type 1 expressed by the infected cells. This interaction requires the presence of sialyl groups on the NKp46-T225 O-glycoforms. In the current study, we analyzed the O-glycan sequences that are imperative for the interaction between recombinant NKp46 (rNKp46) and IV H1N1 strains. We first showed that rNKp46 binding to IV H1N1 is not mediated by a glycoform unique to the Thr225 site. We then characterized the O-glycan sequences that mediate the interaction of rNKp46 and IV H1N1; we employed rNKp46s with dissimilar glycosylation patterns and IV H1N1 strains with different sialic acid α2,3 and α2,6 linkage preferences. The branched α2,3-sialylated O-glycoform Neu5NAcα2,3-Galβ1,4-GlcNAcβ1,6[Neu5NAcα2,3-Galβ1,3]GalNAc competently mediated the interaction of rNKp46 with IV H1N1, manifesting a preference for α2,3 linkage. In contrast, the linear α2,3-sialylated O-glycoform Neu5NAcα2,3-Galβ1,3-GalNAc was not correlated with enhanced interaction between rNKp46 and IV H1N1 or a preference for α2,3 linkage. The branched α2,3- and α2,6-sialylated O-glycoform Neu5NAcα2,3-Galβ1,3[Neu5NAcα2,6]GalNAc competently mediated the interaction of rNKp46 with IV H1N1, manifesting a preference for α2,6 linkage. Previous viral HA-binding-specificity studies were performed with glycopolymer conjugates, free synthetic sialyl oligosaccharides, and sialidase-treated cells. This study shed light on the O-glycan sequences involved in the interaction of glycoprotein and viral hemagglutinins and may help in the design of agents inhibitory to hemagglutinin for influenza treatment.Hemagglutinin (HA) is the receptor-binding and membrane fusion protein of influenza virus (IV), as well as the target for infectivity-neutralizing antibodies (27). Terminal sialic acids of glycoproteins and glycolipids are the cellular receptors for the IV HA (27). Two major linkages between sialic acid and the penultimate galactose residues of carbohydrate side chains are found in nature, Neu5NAcα(2,3)-Gal and Neu5NAcα(2,6)-Gal (27); different HAs have different recognition specificities for these linkages and the sugar backbone beneath (23, 26, 30). However, all of the HA-binding specificity studies were performed with glycopolymer conjugates, free synthetic sialyl oligosaccharides, and sialidase-treated cells (8, 10, 20, 25). This could be sufficient for the design of IV-inhibitory agents, and yet, it contributes only partially to the understanding of the interaction of IV HAs with glycoproteins and glycolipids. We aimed to further explore the exact glycoform sequences conjugated to a specific glycoprotein''s glycosylation site that is recognized by different IV strains.For this purpose, we took advantage of our findings on the interaction of natural cytotoxicity receptors (NCRs) and IV HAs (2, 3, 13, 18, 19, 22, 34). We showed that the NKp44 and NKp46 NCRs but not the NKp30 NCR interact with IV HAs. This interaction requires the sialylation of NKp44 and NKp46 oligosaccharides, and the binding of these NCRs to viral HA is required for the lysis of virus-infected cells by NK cells (3, 13, 18). NKp46 displays two putative O-linked glycosylation sites at Thr125 and Thr225 and one N-linked glycosylation site at Asn216. In order to determine the specific sugar-carrying residue that is important for the HA1 recognition, site-directed mutagenesis of the three residues was performed to carry the glycan modifications. Only when Thr225 was replaced was a sharp decrease in the enhanced binding to IV HA1 and IV H1N1-infected cells observed (2). Therefore, for the NKp46 receptor, the interaction with IV HA1 is restricted to Thr225, one of its three glycosylation sites (2).We already showed that producing recombinant NKp46 (rNKp46) in different cell lines resulted in dissimilar glycosylation patterns and had a strong effect on the binding to its ligands (11). Therefore, we analyzed the O-glycan patterns of rNKp46 produced from various cell lines and utilized the dissimilar glycosylation patterns to elucidate the NKp46 O-glycan sequences that mediate the interaction with IV H1N1 strains. To associate the results with the IV preference for sialic acid α2,3 and/or α2,6 linkages, we employed A/PR/8/34 (H1N1), A/NC/20/99 (H1N1), and A/Brisbane/59/2007 (H1N1) grown in either hen egg amnion or Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. Our results pointed to two branched O-glycan sequences that mediated the interaction of the NKp46 glycoprotein with IV H1N1 in correlation with the sialic acid linkage preference of the IV strain.  相似文献   

13.
In March 2013, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported human infections with an H7N9 influenza virus, and by 20 July 2013, the numbers of laboratory-confirmed cases had climbed to 134, including 43 fatalities and 127 hospitalizations. The newly emerging H7N9 viruses constitute an obvious public health concern because of the apparent severity of this outbreak. Here we focus on the hemagglutinins (HAs) of these viruses and assess their receptor binding phenotype in relation to previous HAs studied. Glycan microarray and kinetic analyses of recombinant A(H7N9) HAs were performed to compare the receptor binding profile of wild-type receptor binding site variants at position 217, a residue analogous to one of two positions known to switch avian to human receptor preference in H2N2 and H3N2 viruses. Two recombinant A(H7N9) HAs were structurally characterized, and a mutational study of the receptor binding site was performed to analyze important residues that can affect receptor preference and affinity. Results highlight a weak human receptor preference of the H7N9 HAs, suggesting that these viruses require further adaptation in order to adapt fully to humans.  相似文献   

14.
Influenza A neuraminidase (NA) is a target for anti-influenza drugs. The function of this enzyme is to cleave a glycosidic linkage of a host cell receptor that links sialic acid (Sia) to galactose (Gal), to allow the virus to leave an infected cell and propagate. The receptor is an oligosaccharide on the host cell surface. There are two types of oligosaccharide receptor; the first, which is found mainly on avian epithelial cell surfaces, links Sia with Gal by an α2,3 glycosidic linkage; in the second, found mainly on human epithelial cell surfaces, linkage is via an α2,6 linkage. Some researchers believe that NAs from different viruses show selectivity for each type of linkage, but there is limited information available to confirm this hypothesis. To see if the linkage type is more specific to any particular NA, a number of NA-receptor complexes of human influenza A H1N1 (1918), avian influenza A H5N1 (2004), and a pandemic strain of H1N1 (2009) were constructed using homology modeling and molecular dynamics simulation. The results show that the two types of receptor analogues bound to NAs use different mechanisms. Moreover, it was found that a residue unique to avian virus NA is responsible for the recognition of the Siaα2,3Gal receptor, and a residue unique to human virus NA is responsible for the recognition of Siaα2,6Gal. We believe that this finding could explain how NAs of different virus origins always possess some unique residues.  相似文献   

15.
The conformational dynamics of the carbohydrate headgroup of ganglioside GD1a, NeuAc alpha 2-->3Gal beta 1-->3GalNAc beta 1-->4[NeuAc alpha 2-->3]Gal beta 1-->4Glc beta 1-->1Cer, anchored in a perdeuterated dodecylphosphocholine micelle in aqueous solution, were probed by high resolution NMR spectroscopy. The observed 1H/1H NOE interactions revealed conformational averaging of the terminal NeuAc alpha 2-->3Gal and Gal beta 1-->3GalNAc glycosidic linkages. The pronounced flexibility of this trisaccharide moiety was substantiated further by two-dimensional proton-detected 13C T1, T1 rho and 1H/13C NOE measurements. The anchoring effect of the micelle allowed the detection of conformational fluctuations of the headgroup on the time scale of a few hundred picoseconds. NMR experiments performed on the GD1a/DPC micelles in H2O at low temperatures permitted the observation of hydroxyl proton resonances, contributing valuable conformational information.  相似文献   

16.
The human parainfluenza virus (hPIV) hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) protein binds (H) oligosaccharide receptors that contain N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac) and cleaves (N) Neu5Ac from these oligosaccharides. In order to determine if one of HN′s two functions is predominant, we measured the affinity of H for its ligands by a solid-phase binding assay with two glycoprotein substrates and by surface plasmon resonance with three monovalent glycans. We compared the dissociation constant (Kd) values from these experiments with previously determined Michaelis-Menten constants (Kms) for the enzyme activity. We found that glycoprotein substrates and monovalent glycans containing Neu5Acα2-3Galβ1-4GlcNAc bind HN with Kd values in the 10 to 100 μM range. Km values for HN were previously determined to be on the order of 1 mM (M. M. Tappert, D. F. Smith, and G. M. Air, J. Virol. 85:12146–12159, 2011). A Km value greater than the Kd value indicates that cleavage occurs faster than the dissociation of binding and will dominate under N-permissive conditions. We propose, therefore, that HN is a neuraminidase that can hold its substrate long enough to act as a binding protein. The N activity can therefore regulate binding by reducing virus-receptor interactions when the concentration of receptor is high.  相似文献   

17.
We previously identified several peptide sequences that mimicked the terminal sugars of complex glycans. Using plant lectins as analogs of lectin-type cell-surface receptors, a tetravalent form of a peptide with the sequence NPSHPLSG, designated svH1C, bound with high avidity to lectins specific for glycans with terminal 5-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac)-galactose (Gal)/N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) sequences. In this report, we show by circular dichroism and NMR spectra that svH1C lacks an ordered structure and thus interacts with binding sites from a flexible conformation. The peptide binds with high avidity to several recombinant human siglec receptors that bind preferentially to Neu5Ac(α2,3)Gal, Neu5Ac(α2,6)GalNAc or Neu5Ac(α2,8)Neu5Ac ligands. In addition, the peptide bound the receptor NKG2D, which contains a lectin-like domain that binds Neu5Ac(α2,3)Gal. The peptide bound to these receptors with a KD in the range of 0.6 to 1 μM. Binding to these receptors was inhibited by the glycoprotein fetuin, which contains multiple glycans that terminate in Neu5Ac(α2,3)Gal or Neu5Ac(α2,6)Gal, and by sialyllactose. Binding of svH1C was not detected with CLEC9a, CLEC10a or DC-SIGN, which are lectin-type receptors specific for other sugars. Incubation of neuraminidase-treated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells with svH1C resulted in binding of the peptide to a subset of the CD14+ monocyte population. Tyrosine phosphorylation of siglecs decreased dramatically when peripheral blood mononuclear cells were treated with 100 nM svH1C. Subcutaneous, alternate-day injections of svH1C into mice induced several-fold increases in populations of several types of immune cells in the peritoneal cavity. These results support the conclusion that svH1C mimics Neu5Ac-containing sequences and interacts with cell-surface receptors with avidities sufficient to induce biological responses at low concentrations. The attenuation of inhibitory receptors suggests that svH1C has characteristics of a checkpoint inhibitor.  相似文献   

18.
Influenza A viruses attach to alpha-sialosides on the target cell surface by their hemagglutinins, which strictly recognize the difference in sialic acid-galactose linkage. Why does avian virus H3 subtype bind to avian receptor Neu5Ac(alpha2-3)Gal stronger than to human receptor Neu5Ac(alpha2-6)Gal? Why does avian H3 mutated Gln226 to Leu preferentially bind to human receptor? In this paper, we theoretically answer the questions by molecular mechanics and ab initio fragment molecular orbital (FMO) calculations. The binding energy between avian H3 and avian receptor is 8.2kcal/mol larger than that of the avian H3-human receptor complex estimated at the FMO-HF/STO-3G level, which is a reason that avian H3 binds to avian receptor stronger than to human receptor. Avian Leu226 H3 clashes to Gal unit on the avian receptor to quite decrease its binding affinity. In contrast, Gal unit on the human receptor forms intermolecular hydrophobic interaction with avian Leu226 H3 to afford moderate binding affinity.  相似文献   

19.
Today, global attention is focused on two influenza virus strains: the current pandemic strain, swine origin influenza virus (H1N1-2009), and the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus, H5N1. At present, the infection caused by the H1N1-2009 is moderate, with mortality rates of less <1%. In contrast, infection with the H5N1 virus resulted in high mortality rates, and ca. 60% of the infected patients succumb to the infection. Thus, one of the world greatest concerns is that the H5N1 virus will evolve to allow an efficient human infection and human-to-human transmission. Natural killer (NK) cells are one of the innate immune components playing an important role in fighting against influenza viruses. One of the major NK activating receptors involved in NK cell cytotoxicity is NKp46. We previously demonstrated that NKp46 recognizes the hemagglutinin proteins of B and A influenza virus strains. Whether NKp46 could also interact with H1N1-2009 virus or with the avian influenza virus is still unknown. We analyzed the immunological properties of both the avian and the H1N1-2009 influenza viruses. We show that NKp46 recognizes the hemagglutinins of H1N1-2009 and H5 and that this recognition leads to virus killing both in vitro and in vivo. However, importantly, while the swine H1-NKp46 interactions lead to the direct killing of the infected cells, the H5-NKp46 interactions were unable to elicit direct killing, probably because the NKp46 binding sites for these two viruses are different.Natural killer (NK) cells, which comprise 5 to 15% of peripheral blood lymphocytes, are a key frontline defense against a number of pathogens, including intracellular bacteria, parasites, and most importantly with respect to the present study, viruses (6, 40). The antiviral mechanisms by which NK cells operate include both cytotoxic activity and cytokine/chemokine secretion (21). The NK killing activity is executed by numerous receptors, including NKG2D, NKp80, CD16, and the natural cytotoxic receptors (NCRs): NKp30, NKp44, and NKp46 (7, 10, 25).Although the cellular ligands for NKG2D were identified (31, 38), the identity of several of the cellular ligands for the human NCRs is still unknown, except for BAT3 and B7-H6, which are ligands for NKp30 (8, 30). In contrast, viral ligands were identified for the NCRs, and we demonstrated that pp65 of HCMV interacts with NKp30 (3) and that various influenza virus hemagglutinins (HAs) are ligands for the NKp44 and NKp46 receptors (5, 22). Supporting these observations, it was recently shown that the HA-neuraminidase of Newcastle disease virus could also interact with NKp46 and NKp44 but not with NKp30 (17). Furthermore, we have shown in vivo that in the absence of NCR1 (the mouse homologue of NKp46), A/PR8 influenza virus infection is lethal (14).Human influenza virus (H1 and H3 subtype) infections pose a major threat to the entire population, as exemplified by the three major influenza pandemics that occurred during the 20th century. The Asian (A/H2N2) in 1957 to 1958 and the Hong Kong (A/H3N2) pandemics in 1968 to 1969 resulted in the deaths of 1 to 2 million people and the 1918 “Spanish flu” (A/H1N1) pandemic killed around 50 million people (18). At present, the worldwide concern regarding influenza pandemics concentrates mainly on two viruses: the A/H1N1 swine origin influenza virus (H1N1-2009), which currently causes only a moderate pandemic (the mortality rates are ca. 1%) but is more pathogenic than a regular seasonal influenza virus (19, 26, 27), and the avian influenza virus carrying the unique H5 HA (20). The avian influenza virus is quite deadly and, although it remains a zoonotic infection, ca. 60% of infected humans died due to the infection (28).The unique properties of the H5 protein of the avian influenza virus are one of the main reasons for the virulence of the virus. The H5 of the avian influenza virus binds to cell surface glycoproteins or glycolipids containing terminal sialyl-galactosyl residues linked by 2-3-linkage [Neu5Ac(α2-3)Gal] that are found in the human conjunctiva and ciliated portion of the respiratory columnar epithelium (33). In contrast, human viruses (including all three strains that caused the pandemics described above and the H1N1-2009) bind to receptors that mostly contain terminal 2-6-linked sialyl-galactosyl moieties [Neu5Ac(α2-6)Gal]. Such glycosylations are predominant on epithelial cells in the nasal mucosa, paranasal sinuses, pharynx, trachea, and bronchi (33, 37). It has been suggested that the lack of human-to-human transmission of avian influenza viruses is due to their α2,3-SA receptor binding preference, and the concern is that genetic changes in H5 might alter its preference from α2,3-SA to α2,6-SA, allowing human-to-human transmission.In our previous studies (4, 22) we showed that the interaction between NKp46 and influenza virus HAs depends on the sialylation of the NKp46 receptor. We further demonstrated that the sialic acid residues, which are linked via α2,6 to the threonine 225 residue of NKp46, are crucial for the NKp46 interactions with the various influenza virus HAs (4).We show that, both in vitro and in vivo, the killing of H1N1-2009-infected cells is correlated with the degree of NKp46 binding. Surprisingly, we observed that although NKp46 efficiently recognized the avian H5 HA, such interactions were unable to elicit the direct killing of the infected cells. By using mutagenesis analysis experiments and killing assays we demonstrate that NKp46 interacts with H1 and H5 at distinct sites, since we show that the sugar carrying residue at position 225 is crucial for the NKp46-H1N1-2009 interactions, whereas the interaction of H5 with NKp46 depends on both residues 216 and 225.  相似文献   

20.
To elucidate the molecular mechanisms of transmission of influenza viruses between different host species, such as human and birds, binding properties of sialic acid-containing carbohydrates that are recognized by human and/or avian influenza viruses were characterized by the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) method. Differences in the binding of influenza viruses to three gangliosides were monitored in real-time and correlated with receptor specificity between avian and human viruses. SPR analysis with ganglioside-containing lipid bilayers demonstrated the recognition profile of influenza viruses to not only sialic acid linkages, but also core carbohydrate structures on the basis of equilibrated rate constants. Kinetic analysis showed different binding preferences to gangliosides between avian and human strains. An avian strain bound to Neu5Acα2-3nLc4Cer with much slower dissociation rate than its sialyl-linkage analog, Neu5Acα2-6nLc4Cer, on the lipid bilayer. In contrast, a human strain bound equally to both gangliosides. An avian strain, but not a human strain, also interacted with GM3 carrying a shorter carbohydrate chain. Our findings demonstrated the remarkable distinction in the binding kinetics of sialic acid-containing carbohydrates between avian and human influenza viruses on the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

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