首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Mutations in the receptor-binding site of the hemagglutinin of pandemic influenza A(H1N1) 2009 viruses have been detected sporadically. An Asp222Gly (D222G) substitution has been associated with severe or fatal disease. Here we show that 222G variants infected a higher proportion of ciliated cells in cultures of human airway epithelium than did viruses with 222D or 222E, which targeted mainly nonciliated cells. Carbohydrate microarray analyses showed that 222G variants bind a broader range of α2-3-linked sialyl receptor sequences of a type expressed on ciliated bronchial epithelial cells and on epithelia within the lung. These features of 222G mutants may contribute to exacerbation of disease.Although the majority of disease cases have been mild, the pandemic influenza A(H1N1) 2009 (H1N1pdm) virus has caused a substantial number of severe and fatal infections (2). Mutants with a D222G or D222E substitution (D225G or D225E in the H3 numbering system) in the receptor-binding site of the virus hemagglutinin (HA) have been detected sporadically (1), and the D222G substitution has been observed to correlate with cases of severe or fatal disease (1, 3, 9, 14). Cell surface receptors for influenza viruses are sialyl glycans (α2-3 Sia or α2-6 Sia) with terminal sialic acid linked α2-3 or α2-6, respectively, to a penultimate galactose. These differ in distribution in the tissues and cells of different species. The sialyl glycans are differentially recognized by the HAs of human and animal influenza viruses and are critical determinants of host range and tissue tropism (16). Using an experimental system of differentiated cultures of human tracheobronchial epithelial cells (HTBE) for studying influenza virus cell tropism, we and others have established that in the initial stages of infection, seasonal human influenza viruses which recognize α2-6 Sia receptors infect mainly nonciliated cells, whereas avian viruses which recognize α2-3 Sia receptors predominantly infect ciliated cells (8, 17, 22).Previous analyses of human and swine influenza H1N1 viruses (5, 15, 21) and preliminary studies of H1N1pdm viruses (24) have indicated that amino acid substitutions in the HA at position 222 may affect the specificity of receptor binding. This, in turn, would be predicted to determine the range of cell types in human respiratory tissues infected by the viruses (17, 20, 22, 23). We have therefore examined the influence of the D222G and D222E substitutions on the cell tropism of H1N1pdm viruses in HTBE cultures (Table (Table1).1). Five viruses were isolated from clinical material in MDCK cells and passaged solely in these cells. Two of these, A/Hamburg/5/2009 (Ham) (4) isolated from a case of mild infection and A/Moldova/G186/2009 (Mol) from a serious but nonfatal infection, had 222D. A/Dakar/37/2009 (Dak) isolated from a mild case of the disease had 222E. Two isolates from fatal cases, A/Lviv/N6/2009 (Lvi) and A/Norway/3206-3/2009 (Nor), had 222G. A sixth virus tested, A/Hamburg/5/2009-e (Ham-e), was derived from Ham by egg passage and plaque purification in MDCK cells and differed by a single substitution, D222G.

TABLE 1.

Differences in amino acid sequence of the HAs of the H1N1pdm viruses and cell tropism in HTBE cultures
VirusOutcomeSubstitution at HA position:a
Infected ciliated cellsb
137 (140)154 (157)155 (158)203 (206)222 (225)
A/Moldova/G186/2009 (Mol)NonfatalPKGTD4.7 (2.2)
A/Dakar/37/2009 (Dak)NonfatalE2.7 (1.8)
A/Hamburg/5/2009 (Ham)NonfatalS3.3 (2.1)
A/Hamburg/5/2009-e (Ham-e)SG25 (12)d
A/Norway/3206-3/2009 (Nor)FatalSEcG19 (6.7)d
A/Lviv/N6/2009 (Lvi)FatalEcG34 (15)d
Open in a separate windowaAmino acids differing from those of Moldova/G186/2009 are shown. H3 numbering is in parentheses.bThe percentage of infected ciliated cells relative to the total number of infected cells. Standard deviations are shown in parentheses.cSubstitution acquired during isolation and propagation in MDCK cells.dP < 0.0001 (unpaired two-sided t test versus A/Moldova/G186/2009).The preparation of differentiated HTBE cultures, viral infection of the cultures for cell tropism analysis, and double immunostaining for viral antigen and cilia of ciliated cells were done as described previously (17). Infected cells were counted in the epithelial segment that included 15 to 30 consecutive microscopic fields containing between 5 and 20% ciliated cells relative to the total number of superficial cells. Percentages of infected ciliated cells relative to the total number of infected cells were calculated for each segment. Ten segments per culture were analyzed, and the results were averaged.Two distinctive patterns of cell tropism were observed (Fig. (Fig.11 and Table Table1).1). The viruses with 222D (Mol and Ham) and 222E (Dak) showed a pattern of cell tropism typical of seasonal influenza A and B viruses (17, 22) infecting predominantly nonciliated cells known to be rich in α2-6 Sia sequences (17): less than 5% of infected cells were ciliated. In contrast, the three viruses with 222G, Lvi, Nor, and Ham-e, infected both ciliated and nonciliated cells, and 20% or more of the infected cells were ciliated and known to express α2-3 Sia sequences (11, 17). This change in cell tropism, with a 5- to 10-fold increase in the infection of ciliated cells, thus correlated with the presence of the D222G substitution in the HA, and other amino acid differences, in particular D222E, had little or no effect. Furthermore, there were no differences between the amino acid sequences of the neuraminidases (NA) of the 222D, 222G, and 222E viruses which might have an impact on cell tropism: the NA sequences of Mol, Nor, Lvi, and Dak were identical.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Difference in cell tropism between the clinical isolate Ham (left image) and its 222G variant Ham-e (right image) in HTBE cultures. The cultures were infected at a multiplicity of infection of approximately 1, fixed 8 h after infection, and double immunostained for virus antigen using rabbit antisera against A/California/4/2009(H1N1pdm) (red) and for cilia of ciliated cells using an anti-β tubulin monoclonal antibody (dark gray). Arrowheads point to infected ciliated cells. Bars, 10 μm.To investigate whether changes in receptor binding specificity could account for the distinct cell tropism of the 222G variants, we performed carbohydrate microarray analyses (Fig. (Fig.22 and Table Table2;2; see Fig. S1 and S2 and Table S1 in the supplemental material). The virus preparations were analyzed in the absence of or following inactivation by treatment with beta-propiolactone; the conditions used (4) had no perceptible effect on the receptor-binding profiles. Virus suspensions were concentrated by pelleting, adjusted to contain equivalent concentrations of viruses as assessed by HA titration with human red blood cells and gel electrophoresis with immunoblotting, and stored at 4°C in phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.4) containing 0.05% sodium azide. The microarray analyses were performed as described previously (4) using the same array series of lipid-linked probes (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). Unless stated otherwise, the viruses were analyzed at an HA titer of 2,000.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.Carbohydrate microarray analyses of H1N1pdm viruses. The microarray data are for the two 222D viruses (Mol and Ham), the 222E mutant virus (Dak), and the three 222G mutant viruses (Nor, Lvi, and Ham-e) analyzed at an HA titer of 2,000. The microarrays consisted of 80 sialylated and 6 neutral lipid-linked glycan probes arranged according to sialic acid linkage, glycan backbone chain length, and sequence (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). The numerical scores for the fluorescent binding signals are means (with error bars) for duplicate spots at 5 fmol/spot. The various types of terminal sialic acid linkage are indicated by the colored panels as defined at the bottom.

TABLE 2.

Virus binding of selected α2-3 Sia sequences in carbohydrate microarrays grouped according to backbone sequence and lipid moiety
Open in a separate window
Open in a separate windowa Probe number and position in microarrays.b Abbreviations for monosaccharides: Fuc, fucose; Gal, galactose; Glc, glucose; GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine; NeuAc, N-acetylneuraminic acid. Other abbreviations: Cer, natural glycolipids with various ceramide moieties; Cer36, synthetic glycolipids with ceramide having a total of 36 carbon atoms; DH, neoglycolipids prepared from reducing oligosaccharides by reductive amination with the amino lipid 1,2-dihexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine.c —, Signal intensity of <500.For all of the viruses, the intensities of binding to α2-6 Sia sequences were greater overall than the intensities of binding to the α2-3 Sia sequences. There were, however, marked differences between the two 222D viruses, Mol and Ham, and the three 222G variants, Lvi, Nor, and Ham-e, in binding to the α2-3 Sia sequences (highlights are in Table Table2).2). With the 222D viruses, relatively low intensities of binding to α2-3 Sia sequences were detected and they bound mostly to α2-3 Sia sequences that were modified with fucose (Fuc) on the outer N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), as in the blood group-related antigens sialyl Lewisa (SLea) and SLex (probes 28, 29, and 31) and/or with sulfate (SU) on GlcNAc (probes 27 and 35, Table Table2;2; see Fig. S2b in the supplemental material). This is in accord with our previous study of Ham (see Fig. S3 in the supplemental material for reference 4). In contrast, the 222G mutants not only bound more strongly to these α2-3 Sia sequences but bound to additional sequences, such as the VIM-2 antigen sequence (probe 39) with Fuc on internal GlcNAc and to sequences lacking Fuc or SU (probes 23 and 24, Table Table2;2; see Fig. S2a in the supplemental material). All of the pdm viruses investigated here showed greater binding to the 6SU-SLex sequence (probe 35) than to the analogue lacking SU (probe 31) and 6′SU SLex (probe 33, Table Table2).2). This is a property shared with highly pathogenic poultry viruses (6, 7). The pattern of binding to the α2-6 Sia sequences was largely unchanged (Fig. (Fig.2;2; see Fig. S2c in the supplemental material).As passage in MDCK cells tends to select “complementary” amino acid changes such as K154E or G155E in addition to the single D222G mutation present in the virus of the clinical specimen, two more viruses were investigated as controls for the effects of this substitution in Lvi, the double mutant (G155E D222G). These were A/Athens/16606/2009 (Ath) and A/Lisbon/120/2009 (Lis), which possess the G155E substitution in the absence of D222G. The binding profiles observed for Ath and Lis (see Fig. S3 in the supplemental material) indicated that the 155 substitution did not contribute to the increased α2-3 Sia binding of Lvi, which was therefore due exclusively to the D222G substitution.The D222E mutant Dak exhibited a carbohydrate-binding profile that was intermediate between those of the 222D and 222G viruses. Compared to the 222D viruses (Mol and Ham) that targeted preferentially nonciliated cells, Dak displayed slightly increased binding to some α2-3 Sia sequences. It was clearly distinguishable from the 222G variants by weaker or negligible binding to a number of other α2-3 Sia sequences, for example, probes 24 and 33 and the VIM-2 antigen sequence, probe 39 (Fig. (Fig.22 and Table Table2;2; see Fig. S1 and S2 in the supplemental material). These are properties that Dak shared with 222D viruses. The similarities in receptor binding and cell tropism of the 222E and 222D viruses are consistent with their circulation in the population, in contrast to the 222G variants that have emerged sporadically and do not appear to be transmitted readily to other individuals (18).There is thus a clear correlation between enhanced binding to α2-3 Sia sequences by the 222G variants and increased infection of ciliated epithelial cells. The increased capacity of 222G mutant viruses to infect ciliated epithelial cells prominent along the entire airway epithelium would be predicted to interfere with the important mucociliary clearance function of these cells and increase the severity of disease. Another human pathogen, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, which can also cause severe respiratory disease targets the microvilli of ciliated cells in the human bronchus (10) that express the VIM-2 antigen (12, 13). The enhanced capacity of the 222G variants to target α2-3 Sia receptors present in relatively larger amounts on ciliated epithelial cells of the tracheobronchial epithelium (11, 17) and on cells in bronchioles and alveoli (20) may also contribute to more severe pulmonary infection, as suggested by the more frequent identification of 222G variants in specimens from the lower respiratory tract (3), and may explain why they are infrequently transmitted. It is also pertinent to note that the D222G substitution was identified in the HAs from two of five victims of the 1918 pandemic (19). Glycan array analyses of recombinant HAs from one of the 1918 222G mutant viruses (A/New York/1/18) showed (21) a narrow profile of binding to certain α2-3 Sia sequences which had an additional negative charge such as SU or sialic acid. The pattern was more restricted than the repertoire of α2-3 Sia sequences bound by the 222G 2009 pdm viruses that we have investigated here. The New York variant showed little binding to α2-6 Sia sequences, in contrast to the strong and broad α2-6 Sia binding profiles of the 2009 pdm viruses observed here and in an earlier study (24). These differences between the 1918 and 2009 pdm viruses are most likely a reflection of differences in other residues in the receptor-binding pocket.Whether the selection of the D222G mutation is a cause or a consequence of more severe lower respiratory tract infection is still to be resolved. It is evident, however, that its emergence is likely to exacerbate the severity of disease. The altered receptor specificity and distinctive cell tropism of the D222G mutants of H1N1pdm are hallmarks of a more dangerous pathogen, emphasizing the importance of close monitoring of the evolution of these viruses.   相似文献   

2.
The amino acid substitution of aspartic acid to glycine in hemagglutinin (HA) in position 222 (HA-D222G) as well as HA-222D/G polymorphism of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza viruses (A(H1N1)pdm09) were frequently reported in severe influenza in humans and mice. Their impact on viral pathogenicity and the course of influenza has been discussed controversially and the underlying mechanism remained unclarified. In the present study, BALB/c mice, infected with the once mouse lung- and cell-passaged A(H1N1)pdm09 isolate A/Jena/5258/09 (mpJena/5258), developed severe pneumonia. From day 2 to 3 or 4 post infection (p.i.) symptoms (body weight loss and clinical score) continuously worsened. After a short disease stagnation or even recovery phase in most mice, severity of disease further increased on days 6 and 7 p.i. Thereafter, surviving mice recovered. A 45 times higher virus titer maximum in the lung than in the trachea on day 2 p.i. and significantly higher tracheal virus titers compared to lung on day 6 p.i. indicated changes in the organ tropism during infection. Sequence analysis revealed an HA-222D/G polymorphism. HA-D222 and HA-G222 variants co-circulated in lung and trachea. Whereas, HA-D222 variant predominated in the lung, HA-G222 became the major variant in the trachea after day 4 p.i. This was accompanied by lower neutralizing antibody titers and broader receptor recognition including terminal sialic acid α-2,3-linked galactose, which is abundant on mouse trachea epithelial cells. Plaque-purified HA-G222-mpJena/5258 virus induced severe influenza with maximum symptom on day 6 p.i. These results demonstrated for the first time that HA-222D/G quasispecies of A(H1N1)pdm09 caused severe biphasic influenza because of fast viral intra-host evolution, which enabled partial antibody escape and minor changes in receptor binding.  相似文献   

3.
Influenza virus is a global health concern due to its unpredictable pandemic potential. This potential threat was realized in 2009 when an H1N1 virus emerged that resembled the 1918 virus in antigenicity but fortunately was not nearly as deadly. 5J8 is a human antibody that potently neutralizes a broad spectrum of H1N1 viruses, including the 1918 and 2009 pandemic viruses. Here, we present the crystal structure of 5J8 Fab in complex with a bacterially expressed and refolded globular head domain from the hemagglutinin (HA) of the A/California/07/2009 (H1N1) pandemic virus. 5J8 recognizes a conserved epitope in and around the receptor binding site (RBS), and its HCDR3 closely mimics interactions of the sialic acid receptor. Electron microscopy (EM) reconstructions of 5J8 Fab in complex with an HA trimer from a 1986 H1 strain and with an engineered stabilized HA trimer from the 2009 H1 pandemic virus showed a similar mode of binding. As for other characterized RBS-targeted antibodies, 5J8 uses avidity to extend its breadth and affinity against divergent H1 strains. 5J8 selectively interacts with HA insertion residue 133a, which is conserved in pandemic H1 strains and has precluded binding of other RBS-targeted antibodies. Thus, the RBS of divergent HAs is targeted by 5J8 and adds to the growing arsenal of common recognition motifs for design of therapeutics and vaccines. Moreover, consistent with previous studies, the bacterially expressed H1 HA properly refolds, retaining its antigenic structure, and presents a low-cost and rapid alternative for engineering and manufacturing candidate flu vaccines.  相似文献   

4.
The pandemic influenza virus (2009 H1N1) was recently introduced into the human population. The hemagglutinin (HA) gene of 2009 H1N1 is derived from “classical swine H1N1” virus, which likely shares a common ancestor with the human H1N1 virus that caused the pandemic in 1918, whose descendant viruses are still circulating in the human population with highly altered antigenicity of HA. However, information on the structural basis to compare the HA antigenicity among 2009 H1N1, the 1918 pandemic, and seasonal human H1N1 viruses has been lacking. By homology modeling of the HA structure, here we show that HAs of 2009 H1N1 and the 1918 pandemic virus share a significant number of amino acid residues in known antigenic sites, suggesting the existence of common epitopes for neutralizing antibodies cross-reactive to both HAs. It was noted that the early human H1N1 viruses isolated in the 1930s–1940s still harbored some of the original epitopes that are also found in 2009 H1N1. Interestingly, while 2009 H1N1 HA lacks the multiple N-glycosylations that have been found to be associated with an antigenic change of the human H1N1 virus during the early epidemic of this virus, 2009 H1N1 HA still retains unique three-codon motifs, some of which became N-glycosylation sites via a single nucleotide mutation in the human H1N1 virus. We thus hypothesize that the 2009 H1N1 HA antigenic sites involving the conserved amino acids will soon be targeted by antibody-mediated selection pressure in humans. Indeed, amino acid substitutions predicted here are occurring in the recent 2009 H1N1 variants. The present study suggests that antibodies elicited by natural infection with the 1918 pandemic or its early descendant viruses play a role in specific immunity against 2009 H1N1, and provides an insight into future likely antigenic changes in the evolutionary process of 2009 H1N1 in the human population.  相似文献   

5.
The two glycosylation sites (Asn142 and Asn177) were observed in the HA of most human seasonal influenza A/H1N1 viruses, while none in pandemic H1N1/2009 influenza A (pH1N1) viruses. We investigated the effect of the two glycosylation sites on viral virulence and pathogenicity in mice using recombinant pH1N1. The H1N1/144 and H1N1/177 mutants which gained potential glycosylation sites Asn142 and Asn177 on HA respectively were generated from A/Mexico/4486/2009(H1N1) by site-directed mutagenesis and reverse genetics, the same as the H1N1/144+177 gained both glycosylation sites Asn142 and Asn177. The biological characteristics and antigenicity of the mutants were compared with wild-type pH1N1. The virulence and pathogenicity of recombinants were also detected in mice. Our results showed that HA antigenicity and viral affinity for receptor may change with introduction of the glycosylation sites. Compared with wild-type pH1N1, the mutant H1N1/177 displayed an equivalent virus titer in chicken embryos and mice, and increased virulence and pathogenicity in mice. The H1N1/144 displayed the highest virus titer in mice lung. However, the H1N1/144+177 displayed the most serious alveolar inflammation and pathogenicity in infected mice. The introduction of the glycosylation sites Asn144 and Asn177 resulted in the enhancement on virulence and pathogenicity of pH1N1 in mice, and was also associated with the change of HA antigenicity and the viral affinity for receptor.  相似文献   

6.
7.
To study the pathogenicity factors of the pandemic A(H1N1) influenza virus, a number of mutant variants of the A/Hamburg/5/2009 (H1N1)pdm09 strain were obtained through passage in chicken embryos, mouse lungs, and MDCK cell culture. After 17 lung-to-lung passages of the A/Hamburg/5/2009 in mice, the minimum lethal dose of the derived variant decreased by five orders of magnitude compared to that of the parental virus. This variant differed from the original virus by nine amino acid residues in the following viral proteins: hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), and components of the polymerase complex. Additional passaging of the intermediate variants and cloning made it possible to obtain pairs of strains that differed by a single amino acid substitution. Comparative analysis of replicative activity, receptor specificity, and virulence of these variants revealed two mechanisms responsible for increased pathogenicity of the virus for mice. Thus, (1) substitutions in HA (Asp225Gly or Gln226Arg) and compensatory mutation decreasing the charge of HA (Lys123Asn, Lys157Asn, Gly158Glu, Asn159Asp, or Lys212Met) altered viral receptor-binding specificity and restored the functional balance between HA and NA; (2) Phe35Leu substitution in the PA protein increased viral polymerase activity.  相似文献   

8.
Pandemic influenza A H1N1 (pH1N1) virus emerged in 2009. In the subsequent 4 years, it acquired several genetic changes in its hemagglutinin (HA). Mutations may be expected while virus is adapting to the human host or upon evasion from adaptive immune responses. However, pH1N1 has not displayed any major antigenic changes so far. We examined the effect of the amino acid substitutions found to be most frequently occurring in the pH1N1 HA protein before 1 April 2012 on the receptor-binding properties of the virus by using recombinant soluble HA trimers. Two changes (S186P and S188T) were shown to increase the receptor-binding avidity of HA, whereas two others (A137T and A200T) decreased binding avidity. Construction of an HA protein tree revealed the worldwide emergence of several HA variants during the past few influenza seasons. Strikingly, two major variants harbor combinations of substitutions (S186P/A137T and S188T/A200T, respectively) with opposite individual effects on binding. Stepwise reconstruction of the HA proteins of these variants demonstrated that the mutations that increase receptor-binding avidity are compensated for by the acquisition of subsequent mutations. The combination of these substitutions restored the receptor-binding properties (avidity and specificity) of these HA variants to those of the parental virus. The results strongly suggest that the HA of pH1N1 was already optimally adapted to the human host upon its emergence in April 2009. Moreover, these results are in agreement with a recent model for antigenic drift, in which influenza A virus mutants with high and low receptor-binding avidity alternate.  相似文献   

9.
The emergence of the pandemic 2009 H1N1 influenza A virus in humans and subsequent discovery that it was of swine influenza virus lineages raised concern over the safety of pork. Pigs experimentally infected with pandemic 2009 H1N1 influenza A virus developed respiratory disease; however, there was no evidence for systemic disease to suggest that pork from pigs infected with H1N1 influenza would contain infectious virus. These findings support the WHO recommendation that pork harvested from pandemic influenza A H1N1 infected swine is safe to consume when following standard meat hygiene practices.  相似文献   

10.

Background

The Influenza A pandemic H1N1 2009 (H1N1pdm) virus appeared in India in May 2009 and thereafter outbreaks with considerable morbidity and mortality have been reported from many parts of the country. Continuous monitoring of the genetic makeup of the virus is essential to understand its evolution within the country in relation to global diversification and to track the mutations that may affect the behavior of the virus.

Methods

H1N1pdm viruses were isolated from both recovered and fatal cases representing major cities and sequenced. Phylogenetic analyses of six concatenated whole genomes and the hemagglutinin (HA) gene of seven more isolates from May-September 2009 was performed with reference to 685 whole genomes of global isolates available as of November 24, 2009. Molecular characterization of all the 8 segments was carried out for known pathogenic markers.

Results

The first isolate of May 2009 belonged to clade 5. Although clade 7 was the dominant H1N1pdm lineage in India, both clades 6 and 7 were found to be co-circulating. The neuraminidase of all the Indian isolates possessed H275, the marker for sensitivity to the neuraminidase inhibitor Oseltamivir. Some of the mutations in HA are at or in the vicinity of antigenic sites and may therefore be of possible antigenic significance. Among these a D222G mutation in the HA receptor binding domain was found in two of the eight Indian isolates obtained from fatal cases.

Conclusions

The majority of the 13 Indian isolates grouped in the globally most widely circulating H1N1pdm clade 7. Further, correlations of the mutations specific to clade 7 Indian isolates to viral fitness and adaptability in the country remains to be understood. The D222G mutation in HA from isolates of fatal cases needs to be studied for pathogenicity.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
A novel swine-origin pandemic influenza A(H1N1) virus (H1N1pdm, also referred to as S-OIV) was identified as the causative agent of the 21st century''s first influenza pandemic, but molecular features conferring its ability of human-to-human transmission has not been identified. Here we compared the protein sequences of 2009 H1N1pdm strains with those causing other pandemics and the viruses isolated from humans, swines and avians, and then analyzed the mutation trend of the residues at the signature and non-signature positions, which are species- and non-species-associated, respectively, in the proteins of H1N1pdm during the pandemic of 2009. We confirmed that the host-specific genomic signatures of 2009 H1N1pdm, which are mainly swine-like, were highly identical to those of the 1918 H1N1pdm. During the short period of time when the pandemic alert level was raised from phase 4 to phase 6, one signature residue at the position of NP-100 mutated from valine to isoleucine. Four non-signature residues, at positions NA-91, NA-233, HA-206, and NS1-123, also changed during the epidemic in 2009. All these mutant residues, except that at NA-91, are located in the viral functional domains, suggesting that they may play roles in the human adaption and virulence of 2009 H1N1pdm.  相似文献   

13.
Zhang Y  Zhang Q  Gao Y  He X  Kong H  Jiang Y  Guan Y  Xia X  Shu Y  Kawaoka Y  Bu Z  Chen H 《Journal of virology》2012,86(18):9666-9674
Animal influenza viruses pose a clear threat to public health. Transmissibility among humans is a prerequisite for a novel influenza virus to cause a human pandemic. A novel reassortant swine influenza virus acquired sustained human-to-human transmissibility and caused the 2009 influenza pandemic. However, the molecular aspects of influenza virus transmission remain poorly understood. Here, we show that an amino acid in hemagglutinin (HA) is important for the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic virus (2009/H1N1) to bind to human virus receptors and confer respiratory droplet transmissibility in mammals. We found that the change from glutamine (Q) to arginine (R) at position 226 of HA, which causes a switch in receptor-binding preference from human α-2,6 to avian α-2,3 sialic acid, resulted in a virus incapable of respiratory droplet transmission in guinea pigs and reduced the virus's ability to replicate in the lungs of ferrets. The change from alanine (A) to threonine (T) at position 271 of PB2 also abolished the virus's respiratory droplet transmission in guinea pigs, and this mutation, together with the HA Q226R mutation, abolished the virus's respiratory droplet transmission in ferrets. Furthermore, we found that amino acid 271A of PB2 plays a key role in virus acquisition of the mutation at position 226 of HA that confers human receptor recognition. Our results highlight the importance of both the PB2 and HA genes on the adaptation and transmission of influenza viruses in humans and provide important insights for monitoring and evaluating the pandemic potential of field influenza viruses.  相似文献   

14.
D222G/N substitutions in A(H1N1)pdm09 hemagglutinin may be associated with increased binding of viruses causing low respiratory tract infections and human pathogenesis. We assessed the impact of such substitutions on the balance between hemagglutinin binding and neuraminidase cleavage, viral growth and in vivo virulence.Seven viruses with differing polymorphisms at codon 222 (2 with D, 3 G, 1 N and 1 E) were isolated from patients and characterized with regards hemagglutinin binding affinity (Kd) to α-2,6 sialic acid (SAα-2,6) and SAα-2,3 and neuraminidase enzymatic properties (Km, Ki and Vmax). The hemagglutination assay was used to quantitatively assess the balance between hemagglutinin binding and neuraminidase cleavage. Viral growth properties were compared in vitro in MDCK-SIAT1 cells and in vivo in BALB/c mice. Compared with D222 variants, the binding affinity of G222 variants was greater for SAα-2,3 and lower for SAα-2,6, whereas that of both E222 and N222 variants was greater for both SAα-2,3 and SAα-2,6. Mean neuraminidase activity of D222 variants (16.0 nmol/h/106) was higher than that of G222 (1.7 nmol/h/106 viruses) and E/N222 variants (4.4 nmol/h/106 viruses). The hemagglutination assay demonstrated a deviation from functional balance by E222 and N222 variants that displayed strong hemagglutinin binding but weak neuraminidase activity. This deviation impaired viral growth in MDCK-SIAT1 cells but not infectivity in mice. All strains but one exhibited low infectious dose in mice (MID50) and replicated to high titers in the lung; this D222 strain exhibited a ten-fold higher MID50 and replicated to low titers. Hemagglutinin-neuraminidase balance status had a greater impact on viral replication than hemagglutinin affinity strength, at least in vitro, thus emphasizing the importance of an optimal balance for influenza virus fitness. The mouse model is effective in assessing binding to SAα-2,3 but cannot differentiate SAα-2,3- from SAα-2,6- preference, nor estimate the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase balance in A(H1N1)pdm09 strains.  相似文献   

15.
人群中流行的H1N1病毒按其来源可分为两类:人感染的猪H1N1病毒与人类季节性H1N1流感病毒。这两类病毒在流行频率、易感性和致病性等方面存在明显差异。文章收集了1918~2009年间17株人感染的猪甲型H1N1毒株以及21株季节性H1N1毒株,通过序列比对、氨基酸残基保守性分析及3D结构对比等生物信息学方法,揭示造成这两类病毒流行病学和感染性差异的机制。研究发现这两类病毒HA蛋白的进化路径并不相同,且两者具有不同的突变特征,人感染的猪H1N1病毒中,Ca1、Ca2、Sa和Sb四个位点均较为保守,仅Cb位点的突变较快;季节性H1N1病毒仅有Ca1位点较为保守,其他四个抗原性位点均具有较快的突变速率,且较多的突变为新类型的氨基酸。另外,对受体结合位点的研究也显示,这两类病毒的该区域存在5个氨基酸水平的差异(ALA138SER、GLN192LYS、GLN196HIS、ALA198GLU和ALA227GLU),这些位点的差异使得人感染的猪H1N1流感病毒比人类季节性H1N1病毒的易感性更强。这些研究结果可为阐明两类H1N1流感病毒感染性及致病性差异提供更多的信息,并有助于进一步认识H1N1流感病毒的进化机制。  相似文献   

16.

Background

2009 pandemic influenza A/H1N1 (A(H1N1)pdm09) was first detected in the United States in April 2009 and resulted in a global pandemic. We conducted a serologic survey to estimate the cumulative incidence of A(H1N1)pdm09 through the end of 2009 when pandemic activity had waned in the United States.

Methods

We conducted a pair of cross sectional serologic surveys before and after the spring/fall waves of the pandemic for evidence of seropositivity (titer ≥40) using the hemagglutination inhibition (HI) assay. We tested a baseline sample of 1,142 serum specimens from the 2007–2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), and 2,759 serum specimens submitted for routine screening to clinical diagnostic laboratories from ten representative sites.

Results

The age-adjusted prevalence of seropositivity to A(H1N1)pdm09 by year-end 2009 was 36.9% (95%CI: 31.7–42.2%). After adjusting for baseline cross-reactive antibody, pandemic vaccination coverage and the sensitivity/specificity of the HI assay, we estimate that 20.2% (95%CI: 10.1–28.3%) of the population was infected with A(H1N1)pdm09 by December 2009, including 53.3% (95%CI: 39.0–67.1%) of children aged 5–17 years.

Conclusions

By December 2009, approximately one-fifth of the US population, or 61.9 million persons, may have been infected with A(H1N1)pdm09, including around half of school-aged children.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.

Background

The 2009 influenza pandemic and shortages in vaccine supplies worldwide underscore the need for new approaches to develop more effective vaccines.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We generated influenza virus-like particles (VLPs) containing proteins derived from the A/California/04/2009 virus, and tested their efficacy as a vaccine in mice. A single intramuscular vaccination with VLPs provided complete protection against lethal challenge with the A/California/04/2009 virus and partial protection against A/PR/8/1934 virus, an antigenically distant human isolate. VLP vaccination induced predominant IgG2a antibody responses, high hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) titers, and recall IgG and IgA antibody responses. HAI titers after VLP vaccination were equivalent to those observed after live virus infection. VLP immune sera also showed HAI responses against diverse geographic pandemic isolates. Notably, a low dose of VLPs could provide protection against lethal infection.

Conclusion/Significance

This study demonstrates that VLP vaccination provides highly effective protection against the 2009 pandemic influenza virus. The results indicate that VLPs can be developed into an effective vaccine, which can be rapidly produced and avoid the need to isolate high growth reassortants for egg-based production.  相似文献   

19.
Influenza viruses resistant to antiviral drugs emerge frequently. Not surprisingly, the widespread treatment in many countries of patients infected with 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) viruses with the neuraminidase (NA) inhibitors oseltamivir and zanamivir has led to the emergence of pandemic strains resistant to these drugs. Sporadic cases of pandemic influenza have been associated with mutant viruses possessing a histidine-to-tyrosine substitution at position 274 (H274Y) in the NA, a mutation known to be responsible for oseltamivir resistance. Here, we characterized in vitro and in vivo properties of two pairs of oseltaimivir-sensitive and -resistant (possessing the NA H274Y substitution) 2009 H1N1 pandemic viruses isolated in different parts of the world. An in vitro NA inhibition assay confirmed that the NA H274Y substitution confers oseltamivir resistance to 2009 H1N1 pandemic viruses. In mouse lungs, we found no significant difference in replication between oseltamivir-sensitive and -resistant viruses. In the lungs of mice treated with oseltamivir or even zanamivir, 2009 H1N1 pandemic viruses with the NA H274Y substitution replicated efficiently. Pathological analysis revealed that the pathogenicities of the oseltamivir-resistant viruses were comparable to those of their oseltamivir-sensitive counterparts in ferrets. Further, the oseltamivir-resistant viruses transmitted between ferrets as efficiently as their oseltamivir-sensitive counterparts. Collectively, these data indicate that oseltamivir-resistant 2009 H1N1 pandemic viruses with the NA H274Y substitution were comparable to their oseltamivir-sensitive counterparts in their pathogenicity and transmissibility in animal models. Our findings highlight the possibility that NA H274Y-possessing oseltamivir-resistant 2009 H1N1 pandemic viruses could supersede oseltamivir-sensitive viruses, as occurred with seasonal H1N1 viruses.  相似文献   

20.
The 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic is the first human pandemic in decades and was of swine origin. Although swine are believed to be an intermediate host in the emergence of new human influenza viruses, there is still little known about the host barriers that keep swine influenza viruses from entering the human population. We surveyed swine progenitors and human viruses from the 2009 pandemic and measured the activities of the hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA), which are the two viral surface proteins that interact with host glycan receptors. A functional balance of these two activities (HA binding and NA cleavage) is found in human viruses but not in the swine progenitors. The human 2009 H1N1 pandemic virus exhibited both low HA avidity for glycan receptors as a result of mutations near the receptor binding site and weak NA enzymatic activity. Thus, a functional match between the hemagglutinin and neuraminidase appears to be necessary for efficient transmission between humans and may be an indicator of the pandemic potential of zoonotic viruses.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号