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1.
The highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus phenotype is restricted to influenza A viruses of the H5 and H7 hemagglutinin (HA) subtypes. To obtain more information on the apparent subtype-specific nature of the HPAI virus phenotype, a low-pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) H6N1 virus was generated, containing an HPAI H5 RRRKKR↓G multibasic cleavage site (MBCS) motif in HA (the downward arrow indicates the site of cleavage). This insertion converted the LPAI virus phenotype into an HPAI virus phenotype in vitro and in vivo. The H6N1 virus with an MBCS displayed in vitro characteristics similar to those of HPAI H5 viruses, such as cleavage of HA0 (the HA protein of influenza A virus initially synthesized as a single polypeptide precursor) and virus replication in the absence of exogenous trypsin. Studies of chickens confirmed the HPAI phenotype of the H6N1 virus with an MBCS, with an intravenous pathogenicity index of 1.4 and systemic virus replication upon intranasal inoculation, the hallmarks of HPAI viruses. This study provides evidence that the subtype-specific nature of the emergence of HPAI viruses is not at the molecular, structural, or functional level, since the introduction of an MBCS resulted in a fully functional virus with an HPAI virus genotype and phenotype.Wild birds represent the natural reservoir of avian influenza A viruses in nature (43). Influenza A viruses are classified on the basis of the hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) surface glycoproteins. In wild birds throughout the world, influenza A viruses representing 16 HA and 9 NA antigenic subtypes have been found in numerous combinations (also called subtypes, e.g., H1N1, H6N1) (12). Besides classification based on the antigenic properties of HA and NA, avian influenza A viruses can also be classified based on their pathogenic phenotype in chickens. Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus, an acute generalized disease of poultry in which mortality may be as high as 100%, is restricted to subtypes H5 and H7. Other avian influenza A virus subtypes are generally low-pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) viruses that cause much milder, primarily respiratory disease in poultry, sometimes with loss of egg production (6).The HA protein of influenza A virus is initially synthesized as a single polypeptide precursor (HA0), which is cleaved into HA1 and HA2 subunits by host cell proteases. The mature HA protein mediates binding of the virus to host cells, followed by endocytosis and HA-mediated fusion with endosomal membranes (43). Influenza viruses of subtypes H5 and H7 may become highly pathogenic after introduction into poultry and cause outbreaks of HPAI. The switch from an LPAI phenotype to the HPAI phenotype of these H5 and H7 influenza A viruses is achieved by the introduction of basic amino acid residues into the HA0 cleavage site by substitution or insertion, resulting in the so-called multibasic cleavage site (MBCS), which facilitates systemic virus replication (4, 5, 14, 44). The cleavage of the HA0 of LPAI viruses is restricted to trypsin-like proteases which recognize the XXX(R/K)↓G cleavage motif, where the downward arrow indicates the site of cleavage. Replication of these LPAI viruses is therefore restricted to sites in the host where these enzymes are expressed, i.e., the respiratory and intestinal tract (32, 38). The introduction of an RX(R/K)R↓G or R(R/K)XR↓G minimal MBCS motif into the H5 and H7 subtype viruses facilitates the recognition and cleavage of the HA0 by ubiquitous proprotein convertases, such as furin (20, 32, 41, 45). H5 influenza A viruses with a minimal MBCS motif only have the highly pathogenic phenotype if the masking glycosylation site at position 11 in the HA is replaced by a nonglycosylation site. Otherwise, at least one additional basic amino acid has to be inserted to allow the shift from an LPAI virus phenotype to an HPAI virus phenotype to occur (15, 18, 21, 22, 28). No information is available on the minimal prerequisites of H7 influenza A viruses to become highly pathogenic, but all HPAI H7 viruses have at least 2 basic amino acid insertions in the HA0 cleavage site (22). HA0 with the MBCS is activated in a broad range of different host cells and therefore enables HPAI viruses to replicate systemically in poultry (46). To date, little is known about the apparent subtype-specific nature of the introduction of the MBCS into LPAI viruses and the evolutionary processes involved in the emergence of HPAI viruses. When an MBCS was introduced in a laboratory-adapted strain of influenza virus, A/Duck/Ukraine/1/1963 (H3N8), it did not result in a dramatic change in pathogenic phenotype (35). Here, the effect of the introduction of an MBCS into a primary LPAI H6N1 virus, A/Mallard/Sweden/81/2002, is described. The introduction of an MBCS resulted in trypsin-independent replication in vitro and enhanced pathogenesis in a chicken model. Understanding the basis of the HA subtype specificity of the introduction of an MBCS into avian influenza viruses will lead to a better understanding of potential molecular restrictions involved in emergence of HPAI outbreaks.  相似文献   

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Influenza virus-like particles (VLPs) are a promising cell culture-based vaccine, and the skin is considered an attractive immunization site. In this study, we examined the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of influenza VLPs (H1N1 A/PR/8/34) after skin vaccination using vaccine dried on solid microneedle arrays. Coating of microneedles with influenza VLPs using an unstabilized formulation was found to decrease hemagglutinin (HA) activity, whereas inclusion of trehalose disaccharide preserved the HA activity of influenza VLP vaccines after microneedles were coated. Microneedle vaccination of mice in the skin with a single dose of stabilized influenza VLPs induced 100% protection against challenge infection with a high lethal dose. In contrast, unstabilized influenza VLPs, as well as intramuscularly injected vaccines, provided inferior immunity and only partial protection (≤40%). The stabilized microneedle vaccination group showed IgG2a levels that were 1 order of magnitude higher than those of other groups and had the lowest lung viral titers after challenge. Also, levels of recall immune responses, including hemagglutination inhibition titers, neutralizing antibodies, and antibody-secreting plasma cells, were significantly higher after skin vaccination with stabilized formulations. Therefore, our results indicate that HA stabilization, combined with vaccination via the skin using a vaccine formulated as a solid microneedle patch, confers protection superior to that with intramuscular injection and enables potential dose-sparing effects which are reflected by pronounced increases in rapid recall immune responses against influenza virus.Influenza is a major health threat among infectious diseases, posing a significant burden for public health worldwide. Over 200,000 hospitalizations and approximately 36,000 deaths are estimated to occur annually in the United States alone (48, 49). Vaccination is the most cost-effective measure for controlling influenza. However, the influenza vaccine needs to be updated and manufactured every year due to changes in circulating viral strains. Current influenza vaccines rely on egg substrate-based production, a lengthy process with limited capacity that can cause shortages in available vaccine supplies. The recent 2009 outbreak of H1N1 influenza virus is a good example of the urgent need to develop a more effective vaccine platform and vaccination method (38).Influenza virus-like particles (VLPs) have been suggested as a promising alternative candidate to current influenza vaccines. Influenza VLPs are noninfectious particles that mimic the virus in structure and morphology, can be produced using an egg-free cell culture system, and have been shown to be highly immunogenic, inducing protective immunity (9, 15, 19, 27, 35, 41, 42, 44). Most current vaccines are administered intramuscularly to humans in liquid formulations using hypodermic needles or syringes. Another strategy to meet the potential need for mass vaccination would be to develop an effective method for vaccine delivery to the skin (4, 8, 32, 50, 52). The skin is considered an important peripheral immune organ rich in potent immune-inducing cells, including Langerhans cells (LCs), dermal dendritic cells (DCs), and keratinocytes (5, 13, 14, 22). LCs and DCs residing in the epidermal and dermal layers of the skin have been shown to play an important role in antigen processing and presentation following skin immunization (1, 13, 14, 22). Intradermal (ID) vaccination delivering antigens to the dermal layer of the skin has been performed in many clinical studies and have demonstrated dose-sparing effects in some cases (4, 28, 29). Particularly, ID delivery of vaccines might be more effective in the elderly population (50), the highest risk group for influenza epidemics (49). However, ID delivery of vaccines using hypodermic needles is painful and needs highly trained medical personnel. In addition, more frequent local reactions at the injection site were observed after ID delivery. Therefore, a simple and effective approach for vaccination without using hypodermic needles would be highly desirable.To overcome the skin barrier of the outer layer of stratum corneum, solid microneedles were previously coated with inactivated influenza viruses and used to successfully deliver vaccines to the skin, which provided protection comparable to that with conventional intramuscular immunizations (32, 52). Other vaccines have also been delivered using microneedles (17, 17a), but VLPs have never been used this way before. Delivery of a powdered form of inactivated influenza vaccines to the skin has also been demonstrated using a high-speed jet delivery device (10). These previous studies used high doses of vaccines, possibly due to the instability of vaccines in dry formulations.Influenza hemagglutinin (HA) is responsible for attachment of the virus to sialic acid-containing receptors on target cells. However, it is not well understood how functional activity of HA affects the immunogenicity of influenza VLP vaccines. For the first time in this study, we investigated the effect of HA stability, immune responses, and protective efficacies of solid-microneedle VLP vaccines containing H1 HA as a major influenza viral component after delivery to the skin in comparison to results with intramuscular immunization. We found that the functional integrity of HA in influenza VLPs significantly influenced the immunological and protective outcomes for both microneedle and intramuscular vaccination. In addition, we have observed differential outcomes contributing to the protective immunity by the delivery of HA-stabilized VLPs to the skin in terms of the types of immune responses, recall antibody responses, and viral clearance at an early time point after challenge compared to those induced by intramuscular immunization.  相似文献   

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The specificity of the CD4 T-cell immune response to influenza virus is influenced by the genetic complexity of the virus and periodic encounters with variant subtypes and strains. In order to understand what controls CD4 T-cell reactivity to influenza virus proteins and how the influenza virus-specific memory compartment is shaped over time, it is first necessary to understand the diversity of the primary CD4 T-cell response. In the study reported here, we have used an unbiased approach to evaluate the peptide specificity of CD4 T cells elicited after live influenza virus infection. We have focused on four viral proteins that have distinct intracellular distributions in infected cells, hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), nucleoprotein, and the NS1 protein, which is expressed in infected cells but excluded from virion particles. Our studies revealed an extensive diversity of influenza virus-specific CD4 T cells that includes T cells for each viral protein and for the unexpected immunogenicity of the NS1 protein. Due to the recent concern about pandemic avian influenza virus and because CD4 T cells specific for HA and NA may be particularly useful for promoting the production of neutralizing antibody to influenza virus, we have also evaluated the ability of HA- and NA-specific CD4 T cells elicited by a circulating H1N1 strain to cross-react with related sequences found in an avian H5N1 virus and find substantial cross-reactivity, suggesting that seasonal vaccines may help promote protection against avian influenza virus.In recent decades, investigators studying both murine and human T-cell responses to influenza virus have succeeded in identifying peptide epitopes from immunized or vaccinated individuals that are the targets of CD4 T cells. These studies suggest a considerable diversity in CD4 responses. Epitopes derived from hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), nuclear protein (NP), polymerase (PB1 and PB2), matrix (M1), and nonstructural protein (NS1) have all been identified (9, 19, 25-28, 32, 61, 64, 85, 86). Our own laboratory previously analyzed the peptide specificity of CD4 T cells in the primary response of HLA-DR1 transgenic mice toward a human isolate of influenza virus and found that the CD4 T-cell repertoire specific for HA alone was diverse and encompassed at least 30 different peptide epitopes (63). In general, studies with humans have been much less systematic than those with the mouse because of the difficulty in obtaining lymphocyte samples from recently infected individuals and because of the complexity of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules expressed in humans. However, recent studies with MHC class II tetramer reagents (19, 61, 64, 72, 86) have permitted the visualization of CD4 T cells specific for influenza virus directly ex vivo or after a brief (10- to 14-day) in vitro expansion. Those studies have led to the conclusion that the repertoire of CD4 T cells is more diverse than that of CD8 T cells and that CD4 T cells that are specific for most influenza virus proteins can be detected.We have focused on the identification of the peptide specificity of CD4 T cells during the primary response to influenza virus infection using HLA-DR1 transgenic mice with several goals in mind. First, we seek to understand the intracellular events within influenza virus-infected antigen-presenting cells (APC) that shape the repertoire of the peptide:class II complexes expressed, because these events will play a pivotal role in determining the specificity of the anti-influenza virus CD4 T-cell response. Second, we expect these studies to provide significant new insight into the CD4 T-cell antigen repertoire that becomes established upon natural infection of humans with influenza virus. Finally, because HLA-DR1 is widely expressed in human populations, the results of our experiments and the corresponding peptide epitopes identified can immediately be utilized for analyses of human immune responses to influenza viruses and vaccines.Our work (45, 57, 60, 68, 69) and the works of others (1, 18, 51, 58, 65, 71, 73, 75) regarding CD4 T-cell immunodominance in response to exogenous antigens indicate that CD4 T cells tend to focus on a limited number of peptides. Typical protein antigens that are taken up as a “pulse” by peripheral APC lead to CD4 T-cell priming that is very narrow in specificity, limited to usually only a few (less than five) epitopes. Our mechanistic studies (44, 68, 69) further indicate that immunodominant peptides characteristically display high-stability interactions with the MHC class II molecule. This selectivity in CD4 T-cell responses is at least in part due to DM editing within APC, where DM apparently removes the peptides that have low-stability interactions with class II molecules (44). Therefore, only a limited subset of antigenic peptides arrives at the cell surface at a sufficient density to recruit CD4 T cells.The characteristics of influenza virus infection suggest that the immunodominance hierarchy might not follow the “rules” established for exogenous protein antigens. Because influenza virus is typically not a systemic infection, virus replication is normally restricted to the lung (3, 29, 33, 59). Therefore, the primary source of viral antigens available for CD4 T-cell priming may not be free virus particles but, rather, may be dendritic cells that become infected with influenza virus while in the lung and then migrate to the draining lymph node (4, 5, 33, 35, 48, 52). If so, then one might predict that the specificity of CD4 T cells could more closely resemble the repertoire that is elicited by “endogenous” antigens synthesized within the APC (21). Endogenous antigens that have ready access to the endosomally localized MHC class II molecules, because they are either membrane associated or secreted, are most efficiently presented by class II molecules (46, 53, 67, 84). For the influenza virus-infected dendritic cell, these preferences in antigen access would favor the presentation of peptides derived from HA and NA, leading to the selective priming of CD4 T cells that are reactive to these viral proteins.Several critical questions remain with regard to the specificity of CD4 T cells that are elicited in response to influenza virus infection. The first question is how diverse the repertoire is, with regard to both peptide and protein specificities. The second issue is how the CD4 T-cell repertoire changes over time with repeated encounters with different strains of influenza virus, a common occurrence in humans. A final, very important question is whether CD4 T cells elicited during the primary response have equivalent potentials to promote protection against subsequent infection or if this potential is dependent on their antigen specificities. It is thought that the primary contribution of CD4 T cells to protective immunity is their role in facilitating the production of high-affinity neutralizing antibodies to HA and NA (38, 79). Recent studies by Sette and coworkers (74) suggest that for complex viral pathogens, the delivery of CD4 T-cell help for the production of high-affinity antibodies by B cells may require that the CD4 T cells share viral antigen specificity with the B cells. For influenza virus, the most useful CD4 T cells may therefore be those that are specific for the membrane glycoproteins HA and NA.In the study reported here, we use an unbiased and comprehensive approach to evaluate the peptide specificity of CD4 T cells elicited after live influenza virus infection. We have focused on four viral proteins that have distinct intracellular distributions in infected cells: HA and NA, expressed at the plasma membrane of infected cells and on the exterior of the virion membrane; NP, expressed in the cytoplasm and nucleus of infected cells; and, finally, the NS1 protein, with a distribution similar to that of NP in infected cells but which is excluded from the virion particles. Our studies lead to the conclusion that influenza virus-specific CD4 T cells elicited during the primary response are distributed across all proteins studied and that the NS1 protein is particularly immunogenic. Because of the recent concern about pandemic avian influenza virus and because CD4 T cells specific for HA and NA may be particularly useful for promoting the production of neutralizing antibody, we have also evaluated the ability of HA- and NA-specific CD4 T cells elicited against a circulating H1N1 strain of influenza virus to cross-react with related sequences found in an H5N1 avian virus. We find that priming with an H1N1 virus elicits CD4 T cells that display a significant degree of cross-reactivity with influenza virus epitopes derived from avian viruses.  相似文献   

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H2 influenza viruses have not circulated in humans since 1968, and therefore a large segment of the population would likely be susceptible to infection should H2 influenza viruses reemerge. The development of an H2 pandemic influenza virus vaccine candidate should therefore be considered a priority in pandemic influenza preparedness planning. We selected a group of geographically and temporally diverse wild-type H2 influenza viruses and evaluated the kinetics of replication and compared the ability of these viruses to induce a broadly cross-reactive antibody response in mice and ferrets. In both mice and ferrets, A/Japan/305/1957 (H2N2), A/mallard/NY/1978 (H2N2), and A/swine/MO/2006 (H2N3) elicited the broadest cross-reactive antibody responses against heterologous H2 influenza viruses as measured by hemagglutination inhibition and microneutralization assays. These data suggested that these three viruses may be suitable candidates for development as live attenuated H2 pandemic influenza virus vaccines.Influenza pandemics occur when a novel influenza virus enters a population with little preexisting immunity (36). During the pandemics of the last century, novel influenza viruses were introduced either directly from an avian reservoir (34) or were the result of reassortment between contemporaneously circulating human, avian, and swine influenza viruses (5, 29, 36). Due to the lack of preexisting immunity to the novel virus, morbidity and mortality rates are typically higher than in epidemics caused by seasonal influenza viruses (4).Although pandemic preparedness planning has largely focused on the highly pathogenic H5 and H7 avian influenza virus subtypes, the recent emergence of the 2009 pandemic H1N1 viruses underscores the need to consider other influenza virus subtypes as well. Of the 16 hemagglutinin (HA) influenza A virus subtypes that have been identified to date, H1, H2, and H3 have been known to cause influenza pandemics (7, 27), suggesting that these viruses are capable of sustained transmission and can cause disease in humans. While the H1 and H3 subtypes have cocirculated in humans since 1977, H2 influenza viruses have not circulated in humans since 1968 (36) and therefore a large segment of the population would likely be susceptible to infection should H2 influenza viruses reemerge. The 1957 H2 pandemic virus was a reassortant that derived the HA, neuraminidase (NA), and PB1 genes from an avian virus and the remaining gene segments from the circulating H1N1 virus (15, 30). As H2 subtype viruses continue to circulate in avian reservoirs worldwide (12, 17, 18, 22, 33), they remain a potential pandemic threat. The development of an H2 influenza virus vaccine candidate should therefore be considered a priority in future pandemic influenza preparedness planning.Given the low likelihood that a previously selected vaccine virus will exactly match the pandemic virus, the ability to elicit a broadly cross-reactive antibody response to antigenically distinct viruses within a subtype is an important consideration in the selection of a pandemic influenza vaccine candidate. Previous studies have examined the ability of inactivated H2 influenza viruses to provide cross-protection against mouse-adapted variants of reassortant human viruses and an avian H2 influenza virus from 1978 (9, 14). Given the potential for live attenuated influenza virus vaccines to confer a great breadth of heterologous cross-protection (1, 2, 6, 35), we recently conducted a study evaluating cold-adapted A/Ann Arbor/6/1960 (AA CA), an H2 influenza virus used as the backbone of the seasonal live attenuated influenza A virus vaccine currently licensed in the United States (3). However, as H2 influenza virus continues to circulate widely and appear in migratory birds (10, 24, 26), in poultry markets (20), and in swine (21), with evidence of interregional gene transmission (19, 22), a more extensive evaluation of recent isolates may be warranted in the selection of a potential H2 pandemic vaccine candidate.H2 influenza viruses fall into three main lineages: a human lineage, a North American avian lineage, and a Eurasian avian lineage (29). In addition to viruses whose replicative ability in mammals has previously been established (11, 21, 23, 25), we selected a group of geographically and temporally diverse H2 influenza viruses from each lineage. We evaluated the kinetics of replication of each of these viruses in mice and ferrets and compared the abilities of these viruses to induce a broadly cross-reactive antibody response to determine which of these viruses would be suitable for further development as an H2 pandemic influenza vaccine candidate.  相似文献   

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Many novel reassortant influenza viruses of the H9N2 genotype have emerged in aquatic birds in southern China since their initial isolation in this region in 1994. However, the genesis and evolution of H9N2 viruses in poultry in eastern China have not been investigated systematically. In the current study, H9N2 influenza viruses isolated from poultry in eastern China during the past 10 years were characterized genetically and antigenically. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that these H9N2 viruses have undergone extensive reassortment to generate multiple novel genotypes, including four genotypes (J, F, K, and L) that have never been recognized before. The major H9N2 influenza viruses represented by A/Chicken/Beijing/1/1994 (Ck/BJ/1/94)-like viruses circulating in poultry in eastern China before 1998 have been gradually replaced by A/Chicken/Shanghai/F/1998 (Ck/SH/F/98)-like viruses, which have a genotype different from that of viruses isolated in southern China. The similarity of the internal genes of these H9N2 viruses to those of the H5N1 influenza viruses isolated from 2001 onwards suggests that the Ck/SH/F/98-like virus may have been the donor of internal genes of human and poultry H5N1 influenza viruses circulating in Eurasia. Experimental studies showed that some of these H9N2 viruses could be efficiently transmitted by the respiratory tract in chicken flocks. Our study provides new insight into the genesis and evolution of H9N2 influenza viruses and supports the notion that some of these viruses may have been the donors of internal genes found in H5N1 viruses.Wild birds, including wild waterfowls, gulls, and shorebirds, are the natural reservoirs for influenza A viruses, in which they are thought to be in evolutionary stasis (2, 33). However, when avian influenza viruses are transmitted to new hosts such as terrestrial poultry or mammals, they evolve rapidly and may cause occasional severe systemic infection with high morbidity (20, 29). Despite the fact that avian influenza virus infection occurs commonly in chickens, it is unable to persist for a long period of time due to control efforts and/or a failure of the virus to adapt to new hosts (29). In the past 20 years, greater numbers of outbreaks in poultry have occurred, suggesting that the avian influenza virus can infect and spread in aberrant hosts for an extended period of time (5, 14-16, 18, 32).During the past 10 years, H9N2 influenza viruses have become panzootic in Eurasia and have been isolated from outbreaks in poultry worldwide (3, 5, 11, 14-16, 18, 24). A great deal of previous studies demonstrated that H9N2 influenza viruses have become established in terrestrial poultry in different Asian countries (5, 11, 13, 14, 18, 21, 24, 35). In 1994, H9N2 viruses were isolated from diseased chickens in Guangdong province, China, for the first time (4), and later in domestic poultry in other provinces in China (11, 16, 18, 35). Two distinct H9N2 virus lineages represented by A/Chicken/Beijing/1/94 (H9N2) and A/Quail/Hong Kong/G1/98 (H9N2), respectively, have been circulating in terrestrial poultry of southern China (9). Occasionally these viruses expand their host range to other mammals, including pigs and humans (6, 17, 22, 34). Increasing epidemiological and laboratory findings suggest that chickens may play an important role in expanding the host range for avian influenza virus. Our systematic surveillance of influenza viruses in chickens in China showed that H9N2 subtype influenza viruses continued to be prevalent in chickens in mainland China from 1994 to 2008 (18, 19, 36).Eastern China contains one metropolitan city (Shanghai) and five provinces (Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Shandong, and Jiangxi), where domestic poultry account for approximately 50% of the total poultry population in China. Since 1996, H9N2 influenza viruses have been isolated regularly from both chickens and other minor poultry species in our surveillance program in the eastern China region, but their genetic diversity and the interrelationships between H9N2 influenza viruses and different types of poultry have not been determined. Therefore, it is imperative to explore the evolution and properties of these viruses. The current report provides insight into the genesis and evolution of H9N2 influenza viruses in eastern China and presents new evidence for the potential crossover between H9N2 and H5N1 influenza viruses in this region.  相似文献   

10.
Isolation of human subtype H3N2 influenza viruses in embryonated chicken eggs yields viruses with amino acid substitutions in the hemagglutinin (HA) that often affect binding to sialic acid receptors. We used a glycan array approach to analyze the repertoire of sialylated glycans recognized by viruses from the same clinical specimen isolated in eggs or cell cultures. The binding profiles of whole virions to 85 sialoglycans on the microarray allowed the categorization of cell isolates into two groups. Group 1 cell isolates displayed binding to a restricted set of α2-6 and α2-3 sialoglycans, whereas group 2 cell isolates revealed receptor specificity broader than that of their egg counterparts. Egg isolates from group 1 showed binding specificities similar to those of cell isolates, whereas group 2 egg isolates showed a significantly reduced binding to α2-6- and α2-3-type receptors but retained substantial binding to specific O- and N-linked α2-3 glycans, including α2-3GalNAc and fucosylated α2-3 glycans (including sialyl Lewis x), both of which may be important receptors for H3N2 virus replication in eggs. These results revealed an unexpected diversity in receptor binding specificities among recent H3N2 viruses, with distinct patterns of amino acid substitution in the HA occurring upon isolation and/or propagation in eggs. These findings also suggest that clinical specimens containing viruses with group 1-like receptor binding profiles would be less prone to undergoing receptor binding or antigenic changes upon isolation in eggs. Screening cell isolates for appropriate receptor binding properties might help focus efforts to isolate the most suitable viruses in eggs for production of antigenically well-matched influenza vaccines.Influenza A viruses are generally isolated and propagated in embryonated chicken eggs or in cultures of cells of mammalian origin. Human influenza viruses were previously noted to acquire mutations in the hemagglutinin (HA) gene upon isolation and culture in the allantoic sac of embryonated chicken eggs (herein simply referred to as “eggs”) compared to the sequences of those isolated in mammalian cell substrates (herein referred to as “cells”) (29, 30, 44, 53, 58). These mutations resulted in amino acid substitutions that were found to mediate receptor specificity changes and improved viral replication efficiency in eggs (37). In general, cell-grown viruses are assumed to be more similar than their egg-grown counterparts to the viruses present in respiratory secretions (30, 56). Since their emergence in 1968, influenza A (H3N2) viruses have evolved and adapted to the human host while losing their ability to be efficiently isolated and replicate in eggs, particularly after 1992 (37, 42, 48). The rate of isolation of H3N2 clinical specimens after inoculation into eggs can be up to ∼30 times lower than that in mammalian cell cultures, highlighting the strong selective pressure for the emergence of sequence variants (77).Virtually all influenza vaccines for human use were licensed decades ago by national regulatory authorities, which used a product manufactured from influenza viruses isolated and propagated exclusively in eggs; therefore, cell culture isolates have been unacceptable for this purpose (41, 71). The antigen composition of influenza vaccines requires frequent updates (every 2 years, on average) to closely match their antigenic properties to the most prevalent circulating antigenic drift variant viruses (51). The limited availability of H3N2 viruses isolated in eggs has on one or more occasions delayed vaccine composition updates and may have reduced the efficacy of vaccination against new antigenically drifted viruses (3, 34, 37).Entry of influenza viruses into host cells is mediated by HA, which binds to sialic acid containing glycoconjugates on the surface of epithelial cells in the upper respiratory tract (2, 13). The nature of the linkage between sialic acid and the vicinal sugar (usually galactose) varies in different host species and tissues and may therefore determine whether an influenza virus binds to and infects avian or human cells (40, 46, 59, 62, 72-75). Human influenza viruses preferentially bind to α2-6-linked sialic acids, and avian viruses predominantly bind to α2-3-linked sialic acids (59). Previous studies with chicken embryo chorioallantoic membranes revealed differential lectin binding, suggesting that α2-3-linked but not α2-6-linked sialosides are present on the epithelial cells (28). Human H3N2 viruses isolated in cell culture were reported to bind with a high affinity to α2-6-linked sialosides, while viruses isolated in eggs often had increased specificity for α2-3-linked sialosides (19, 20, 28). The functional classification of avian and mammalian influenza virus receptors is further complicated since in vitro and tissue-binding assays have led to new working hypotheses involving glycan chain length, topology, and the composition of the inner fragments of the carbohydrate chain as additional receptor specificity determinants (9, 17, 65, 66, 82). However, the significance of these in vitro properties remains unknown, since the structures of the natural sialosides on host cells that are used for infectious virus entry are undefined.The techniques most widely used to study the interactions of the influenza virus with host cell receptors employ animal cells in various assay formats (36, 57, 59, 64, 69). To overcome the problems of cell-based techniques, new assays that rely on labeled sialyl-glycoproteins or polymeric sialoglycans have been developed (18). However, these assays are limited by having only a few glycans available in polymeric form and offer low throughput. In contrast, glycan microarrays can assess virus binding to multiple well-defined glycans simultaneously. Previous work with influenza live or β-propiolactone (BPL)-inactivated virions as well as recombinantly produced HAs revealed a good correlation with receptor specificity compared to that achieved by other methods of analysis (4, 11, 57, 58, 65-68).Here we have compared paired isolates derived in eggs or cell cultures from the single clinical specimen to better understand their receptor binding specificity and its implications for vaccine production. We examined the differences in the sequences of the HAs between egg- and cell-grown isolates and analyzed their receptor binding profiles using glycan microarrays. Sequence analysis of the HA and glycan binding results revealed two distinct groups of viruses, with many egg isolates showing unexpectedly reduced levels of binding to α2-3 and α2-6 sialosides compared to the levels for the viruses isolated in mammalian cells. Furthermore, these studies highlighted that specific glycans may be important for H3N2 virus growth in eggs.  相似文献   

11.
H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) causes periodic outbreaks in humans, resulting in severe infections with a high (60%) incidence of mortality. The circulating strains have low human-to-human transmissibility; however, widespread concerns exist that enhanced transmission due to mutations could lead to a global pandemic. We previously engineered Newcastle disease virus (NDV), an avian paramyxovirus, as a vector to express the HPAIV hemagglutinin (HA) protein, and we showed that this vaccine (NDV/HA) induced a high level of HPAIV-specific mucosal and serum antibodies in primates when administered through the respiratory tract. Here we developed additional NDV-vectored vaccines expressing either HPAIV HA in which the polybasic cleavage site was replaced with that from a low-pathogenicity strain of influenza virus [HA(RV)], in order to address concerns of enhanced vector replication or genetic exchange, or HPAIV neuraminidase (NA). The three vaccine viruses [NDV/HA, NDV/HA(RV), and NDV/NA] were administered separately to groups of African green monkeys by the intranasal/intratracheal route. An additional group of animals received NDV/HA by aerosol administration. Each of the vaccine constructs was highly restricted for replication, with only low levels of virus shedding detected in respiratory secretions. All groups developed high levels of neutralizing antibodies against homologous and heterologous strains of HPAIV and were protected against challenge with 2 × 107 PFU of homologous HPAIV. Thus, needle-free, highly attenuated NDV-vectored vaccines expressing either HPAIV HA, HA(RV), or NA have been developed and demonstrated to be individually immunogenic and protective in a primate model of HPAIV infection. The finding that HA(RV) was protective indicates that it would be preferred for inclusion in a vaccine. The study also identified NA as an independent protective HPAIV antigen in primates. Furthermore, we demonstrated the feasibility of aerosol delivery of NDV-vectored vaccines.H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) was first detected in human infections in 1997; previously, it had been found only in birds (11, 50). To date, this virus has been identified in 436 confirmed cases of human infection in 15 countries, 262 (60%) of which were fatal (75). The currently circulating H5N1 strains are characterized by low human-to-human transmissibility. This has been attributed, in part, to a preference for binding to α-2,3-linked sialic acids that are present in high concentrations throughout the avian respiratory tract but were thought to be found primarily in the lower human respiratory tract (57), although this explanation has been questioned (48, 49). It has also been observed that mutations in the PB2 subunit of the viral polymerase are necessary to confer the ability for the virus to be spread by aerosolized nasal droplets in ferrets (72). Whatever factors may be involved, there is widespread concern that the avian virus could mutate to enhance its transmissibility among humans, possibly resulting in a global pandemic (28, 50). For the avian H9N2 virus, which also has pandemic potential, it has been demonstrated that only five amino acid changes were sufficient for the virus to gain the ability to be spread by aerosolized nasal droplets in a ferret model (60). Thus, there is an urgent need for vaccines against HPAIV.Several vaccine strategies for HPAIV have been evaluated (reviewed in references 32 and 41), including inactivated and live attenuated vaccines. These efforts have been hampered by several factors. HPAIV strains are highly virulent for embryonated chicken eggs, the most widely used substrate for vaccine manufacture, and their rapid death following inoculation renders eggs unsuitable for efficient virus propagation. In addition, the major protective antigen, hemagglutinin (HA), administered either as a purified protein or in inactivated HPAIV virions, appears to be poorly immunogenic (69, 70). An additional factor complicating the development of HPAIV vaccines based on inactivated virus is the high cost and biohazard associated with HPAIV propagation, which must be done under enhanced biosafety level 3 (BSL-3) containment, although this problem might be addressed by the use of live attenuated reassortant influenza virus vaccines that contain the HPAIV glycoproteins on the background of an avirulent human influenza virus strain (24, 37). In addition, such reassortant strains might serve directly as live attenuated vaccines. Unfortunately, the latter approach may be limited by subtle and unpredictable incompatibility between the avian-origin glycoproteins and human-origin vaccine backgrounds acceptable for human use, which can result in overattenuation in vivo (24). There are also lingering concerns about the significant potential, with a live HPAIV vaccine, for reassortment between gene segments of the vaccine virus and circulating influenza virus strains, which might result in novel strains with unpredictable biological properties (63).We and others have been evaluating Newcastle disease virus (NDV) as a general human vaccine vector for emerging pathogens, including H5N1 HPAIV (7, 18-20, 29). NDV is an avian paramyxovirus that is antigenically unrelated to common human pathogens; hence, its use in humans should not be affected by host immunity to common pathogens. The many naturally occurring strains of NDV can be categorized into three pathotypes based on virulence in chickens: velogenic strains, causing severe disease with high mortality; mesogenic strains, causing disease of intermediate severity with low mortality; and lentogenic strains, causing mild or inapparent infections (reviewed in reference 2). Lentogenic, and sometimes mesogenic, strains of NDV are in wide use as live attenuated vaccines against velogenic NDV in poultry (2). When mesogenic or lentogenic NDV was administered to the respiratory tracts of nonhuman primates as a model for the immunization of humans, the virus was highly attenuated for replication, was shed only at low titers, appeared to remain restricted to the respiratory tract, and was highly immunogenic for the expressed foreign antigen (7). We recently demonstrated that a mesogenic strain of NDV expressing the HA protein of H5N1 HPAIV (NDV/HA) elicited high titers of neutralizing antibodies in serum following combined intranasal (i.n.) and intratracheal (i.t.) delivery in a nonhuman primate model (20). Vaccination of mice with a similar NDV-vectored vaccine protected them from HPAIV challenge (29). However, results obtained with mice do not reliably predict the efficacy of an influenza virus vaccine for human use, due to the pathophysiological and phylogenetic differences between mice and humans (71). In particular, mice may produce a potent immune response to HPAIV vaccines (64) that may not be reproduced in clinical trials (38). These considerations are especially important for a vaccine based on a live viral vector platform, since its immunogenicity, and therefore its protective efficacy, is directly linked to replication, which can differ greatly in various experimental animals versus humans (reviewed in references 6 and 9). Therefore, the protective efficacy of NDV-based vaccines against HPAIV challenge in nonhuman primate models—the closest model to humans—has remained unknown.The protease recognition sequence of the HA protein is one of the major determinants of avian influenza virus pathogenicity (62). HPAIV strains have a “polybasic” cleavage site, containing multiple basic amino acids, that is readily cleaved by ubiquitous intracellular subtilisin-like proteases, facilitating the replication and spread of the virus. In contrast, the HA cleavage site of low-pathogenicity strains contains fewer basic amino acids and depends on secretory trypsin-like proteases found in the respiratory and enteric tracts, resulting in more-localized infections (30, 62). The presence of a polybasic cleavage site in the H5 HA of any live vaccine raises some concern about the possibility of genetic exchange with circulating strains of influenza virus. It should be noted that genetic exchange involving paramyxoviruses is a rare event (14) that has been documented only once (61). However, elimination of the polybasic HA cleavage site would mitigate the effects of even this rare possibility of genetic exchange. Another concern was based on our previous finding that the HPAIV H5 HA protein is incorporated into the NDV envelope as a trimer (20), consistent with its presence in a functional form. While we previously showed that this did not enhance the pathogenicity of the NDV/HA recombinant in chickens (20), we could not rule out the possibility that it might confer an altered tropism on the NDV/HA virus in other systems. For example, a recombinant parainfluenza virus type 3 expressing the Ebola virus glycoprotein incorporated the foreign protein into its envelope, allowing cellular attachment and fusion of the vaccine virus independently of the vector''s own envelope glycoproteins (10).In addition to the HA protein, the neuraminidase (NA) protein is also present on the surfaces of influenza virus-infected cells and virions. Antibodies specific for NA are not thought to interfere with the initial viral attachment and penetration of host cells (36, 40, 54). However, NA-specific antibodies prevent the release of virus from infected cells, thereby decreasing viral spread (35), and they increase resistance to viral infection in humans (40, 47, 54). They also provide at least some protection against viruses bearing homologous or heterologous NA proteins of the same subtype in a mouse model (12, 56). NA also appears to evolve at a lower rate than HA, suggesting that NA-specific antibodies may provide broader protection than a vaccine utilizing HA alone (39). Therefore, it was important to assess the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of the HPAIV NA independently of those of HA, which has not previously been done in a human or nonhuman primate model.  相似文献   

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The ectopic overexpression of Bcl-2 restricts both influenza A virus-induced apoptosis and influenza A virus replication in MDCK cells, thus suggesting a role for Bcl-2 family members during infection. Here we report that influenza A virus cannot establish an apoptotic response without functional Bax, a downstream target of Bcl-2, and that both Bax and Bak are directly involved in influenza A virus replication and virus-induced cell death. Bak is substantially downregulated during influenza A virus infection in MDCK cells, and the knockout of Bak in mouse embryonic fibroblasts yields a dramatic rise in the rate of apoptotic death and a corresponding increase in levels of virus replication, suggesting that Bak suppresses both apoptosis and the replication of virus and that the virus suppresses Bak. Bax, however, is activated and translocates from the cytosol to the mitochondria; this activation is required for the efficient induction of apoptosis and virus replication. The knockout of Bax in mouse embryonic fibroblasts blocks the induction of apoptosis, restricts the infection-mediated activation of executioner caspases, and inhibits virus propagation. Bax knockout cells still die but by an alternative death pathway displaying characteristics of autophagy, similarly to our previous observation that influenza A virus infection in the presence of a pancaspase inhibitor leads to an increase in levels of autophagy. The knockout of Bax causes a retention of influenza A virus NP within the nucleus. We conclude that the cell and virus struggle to control apoptosis and autophagy, as appropriately timed apoptosis is important for the replication of influenza A virus.The pathology of influenza A virus infection usually arises from acute lymphopenia and inflammation of the lungs and airway columnar epithelial cells (23, 38). Influenza A virus induces apoptotic death in infected epithelial, lymphocyte, and phagocytic cells, and apoptosis is a source of tissue damage during infection (3, 22, 33) and increased susceptibility to bacterial pathogens postinfection (31). While the induction of apoptosis by influenza A virus has been well documented (4, 19-21, 28, 33, 37), the mechanisms of this interaction are not well understood. Two viral proteins, NS1 and PB1-F2, have been associated with viral killing of cells. NS1, originally characterized as being proapoptotic (34), was later identified as being an interferon antagonist, inhibiting the activation of several key antiviral responses and restricting the apoptotic response to infection (1, 10, 15, 18, 35, 39, 46). In contrast, PB1-F2 induces apoptosis primarily by localizing to the outer mitochondrial membrane, promoting cytochrome c release, and triggering the apoptotic cascade (43). This effect, however, is typically restricted to infected monocytes, leading to the hypothesis that PB1-F2 induces apoptosis specifically to clear the landscape of immune responders (5, 44). Although PB1-F2 activity does not directly manipulate virus replication or virus-induced apoptosis, PB1-F2 localization to the mitochondrial membrane during infection potentiates the apoptotic response in epithelial and fibroblastic cells through tBID signaling with proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein members Bax and Bak (22, 43, 44).The Bcl-2 protein family consists of both pro- and antiapoptotic members that regulate cytochrome c release during mitochondrion-mediated apoptosis through the formation of pore-like channels in the outer mitochondrial membrane (12, 16). During the initiation of mitochondrion-mediated apoptosis, cytoplasmic Bid is cleaved to form tBID. This, in turn, activates proapoptotic Bax and Bak (40), which drive cytochrome c release and subsequent caspase activation. Bak is constitutively associated with the mitochondrial membrane, whereas inactive Bax is primarily cytosolic, translocating to the outer mitochondrial membrane only after activation (6). The activation of Bax and Bak results in homo- and heterodimer formation at the outer mitochondrial membrane, generating pores that facilitate mitochondrial membrane permeabilization and cytochrome c release (14, 17), leading to caspase activation and the apoptotic cascade (8). Antiapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 protein family, including Bcl-2, inhibit the activation of proapoptotic Bax and Bak primarily by sequestering inactive Bax and Bak monomers via interactions between their BH3 homology domains (7).Bcl-2 expression has been linked to decreased viral replication rates (26). Bcl-2 overexpression inhibits influenza A virus-induced cell death and reduces the titer and spread of newly formed virions (29). The activation of caspase-3 in the absence of sufficient Bcl-2 is critical to the influenza A virus life cycle. Both Bcl-2 expression and the lack of caspase activation during infection lead to the nuclear accumulation of influenza virus ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes, thereby leading to the improper assembly of progeny virions and a marked reduction in titers of infectious virus (26, 41, 42, 45).Here we show that influenza A virus induces mitochondrion-mediated (intrinsic-pathway) apoptosis signaled specifically through Bax and that this Bax signaling is essential for the maximum efficiency of virus propagation. In contrast, Bak expression is strongly downregulated during infection. Cells lacking Bak (while expressing Bax) display a much more severe apoptotic phenotype in response to infection and produce infectious virions at a higher rate than the wild type (WT), suggesting that Bak, which can suppress viral replication, is potentially downregulated by the virus. Our results indicate essential and opposing roles for Bax and Bak in both the response of cells to influenza A virus infection and the ability of the virus to maximize its own replicative potential.  相似文献   

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Since dendritic cells may play a key role in defense against influenza virus infection, we examined the effects of recombinant hemagglutinin (HA) proteins derived from mouse-adapted H1N1 (A/WSN/1933), swine-origin 2009 pandemic H1N1 (A/Texas/05/2009), and highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 (A/Thailand/KAN-1/2004) viruses on mouse myeloid dendritic cells (mDCs). The results reveal that tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-12 (IL-12) p70, and major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) expression was increased in mDCs after treatment with recombinant HA proteins of H1N1 and H5N1. The specificity of recombinant HA treatments for mDC activation was diminished after proteinase K digestion. HA apparently promotes mDC maturation by enhancing CD40 and CD86 expression and suppressing endocytosis. No significant differences in mDC activation were observed among recombinant proteins of H1N1 and H5N1. The stimulation of mDCs by HA proteins of H1N1 and H5N1 was completely MyD88 dependent. These findings may provide useful information for the development of more-effective influenza vaccines.Influenza viruses trigger seasonal epidemics or pandemics of contagious diseases with mild to severe consequences in human and poultry populations worldwide (28). Members of the Orthomyxoviridae family, influenza viruses consist of single-stranded, eight-segment, negative-sense genomic RNAs, helical viral ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes (RNA segments, NP, PB2, PB1, and PA) and four viral envelope proteins (hemagglutinin [HA], neuraminidase [NA], and M1 and M2 matrix proteins). Type A influenza viruses are further classified into various serotypes based on the antigenic characteristics of HA and NA glycoproteins (14).In 2009, a swine-origin H1N1 strain emerged from the genetic reassortants of existing human, avian, and swine influenza viruses, resulting in a global pandemic marked by symptoms more severe than those associated with seasonal influenza virus (3, 24). According to comparative pathology in macaque monkeys, H5N1 induces greater cytokinemia, tissue damage, and interference with immune regulatory mechanisms than H1N1 infection (2). The HA spike protein of influenza virus is believed to play important roles in viral receptor binding, fusion, transmission, host range restriction, virulence, and pathogenesis (13, 27-30).Dendritic cells (DCs), considered the most potent professional antigen-presenting cells, serve as links between innate and adaptive immunity (31). Upon encountering microbial pathogens, endogenous danger signals, or inflammatory mediators, DCs mature and elicit rapid and short-lived innate immune responses before migrating to secondary lymphoid organs and enhancing adaptive immunity (17). Two major subsets of DCs are recognized in mice and humans: (i) myeloid DCs (mDCs, also called conventional DCs), which participate most directly in antigen presentation and activation of naïve T cells, and (ii) plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), which produce type I interferons in response to viral infection (16, 42) and are also capable of inducing immunotolerance under some conditions (9). mDCs and pDCs also comprise different heterologous subsets, with unique localizations, phenotypes, and functions (36). Due to their key role in immune regulation, DCs have been developed for immunotherapeutic agents or prophylactic or therapeutic vaccines for cancer, infectious diseases, and immune system-related diseases (32, 34).DCs are essential in controlling the innate and adaptive immune responses against influenza virus infection (21). Viral RNA is recognized by various pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), including RIG-I-like receptors (RLRs), Toll-like receptors (TLRs), and nucleotide oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptors (NLRs). TLRs play an especially important role in detecting virus invasion and activating DCs (18, 35). However, the mechanisms causing DC activation and maturation in response to influenza viruses are not clear. HA has been described as playing an important role in modulating influenza virus virulence and host immune responses (29). In this study, we examined the effects of several recombinant HA proteins (rHAs) derived from rHA of H1N1 (rH1HA) (A/WSN/1933) and (A/Texas/05/2009) and rHA of H5N1 (rH5HA) (A/Thailand/KAN-1/2004) viruses on the activation and maturation of the mDC subset derived from mouse bone marrow.  相似文献   

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Adaptation of influenza A viruses to a new host species usually involves the mutation of one or more of the eight viral gene segments, and the molecular basis for host range restriction is still poorly understood. To investigate the molecular changes that occur during adaptation of a low-pathogenic avian influenza virus subtype commonly isolated from migratory birds to a mammalian host, we serially passaged the avirulent wild-bird H5N2 strain A/Aquatic bird/Korea/W81/05 (W81) in the lungs of mice. The resulting mouse-adapted strain (ma81) was highly virulent (50% mouse lethal dose = 2.6 log10 50% tissue culture infective dose) and highly lethal. Nonconserved mutations were observed in six viral genes (those for PB2, PB1, PA, HA, NA, and M). Reverse genetic experiments substituting viral genes and mutations demonstrated that the PA gene was a determinant of the enhanced virulence in mice and that a Thr-to-Iso substitution at position 97 of PA played a key role. In growth kinetics studies, ma81 showed enhanced replication in mammalian but not avian cell lines; the PA97I mutation in strain W81 increased its replicative fitness in mice but not in chickens. The high virulence associated with the PA97I mutation in mice corresponded to considerably enhanced polymerase activity in mammalian cells. Furthermore, this characteristic mutation is not conserved among avian influenza viruses but is prevalent among mouse-adapted strains, indicating a host-dependent mutation. To our knowledge, this is the first study that the isoleucine residue at position 97 in PA plays a key role in enhanced virulence in mice and is implicated in the adaptation of avian influenza viruses to mammalian hosts.Migratory waterfowl are the natural reservoir of influenza A viruses (11, 53). The viruses replicate efficiently in their natural hosts but replicate poorly if at all in other species (53). However, these viruses can undergo adaptation or genetic reassortment to infect other hosts (43, 44, 53), including humans. Since 1997, the World Health Organization has documented more than 400 laboratory-confirmed cases of human infection with H5N1 avian influenza virus (54).The molecular basis of influenza virus host range restriction and adaptation to a new host species is poorly understood. Mutations associated with cross-species adaptation are thought to be associated with increased virulence (30). Therefore, studies in animal models have attempted to identify the viral molecular determinants of virulence in specific hosts. Reverse genetics (Rg) methods have also identified genetic differences that affect virus virulence and host range, including changes in the viral internal proteins. Experimental infection of mouse lungs is an effective approach for understanding influenza virus virulence and adaptation (reviewed by A. C. Ward [51]). To acquire virulence in mice, influenza A viruses usually must adapt to these hosts over several consecutive generations (serial passages) in the lungs or brain (1, 25, 30). Previous studies have found that the acquisition of virulence during adaptation in the mouse model is associated with mutations in the HA, NP, NA, M, and NS genes and one or more polymerase genes (2, 3, 18, 36, 42, 51). The polymerase basic protein 2 (PB2) gene is a particularly well-characterized polymerase subunit (7, 23, 40, 46). The PB1 and polymerase acidic protein (PA) genes have been implicated in mouse lung virulence (5, 18, 36, 39, 49) but have shown no evidence of having acquired mutations during adaptation (52). However, the many studies conducted to date have focused mainly on highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses such as the H1N1, H5N1, and H7N7 subtypes (7, 23, 48, 50).Various low-pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) viruses are considered to be potential genetic contributors to the next pandemic strain. Lee et al. (2009) recently reported the presence of avian-like LPAI H5N2 viruses in a number of Korean swine and proposed that the efficient transmissibility of the swine-adapted H5N2 virus could facilitate spread of the virus. They suggested that this adapted virus could potentially serve as a model for pandemic outbreaks of HPAI (e.g., H5N1 and H7N7) virus or could become a pandemic strain itself (21). These findings prompted our interest in the adaptation of an LPAI virus often harbored by wild migratory birds of South Korea. In our ongoing surveillance from 2004 to 2008, approximately 27% of the viruses isolated were of the H5N2 subtype (unpublished data). Studies show that influenza viruses with different genetic backgrounds can acquire different mutations during adaptation in mice. Therefore, we sought to determine whether this common H5N2 virus (nonlethal in mice) would undergo changes different from those observed in highly virulent viruses during adaptation in mice. Wild-bird influenza virus strain A/Aquatic bird/Korea/W81/05 (W81) was adapted in mice over 11 passages and became highly virulent. To identify molecular determinants of this adaptation and altered virulence, we used Rg-generated recombinant viruses to compare the parental and mouse-adapted strains. Here we show that the PA subunit of the polymerase complex, independently of PB2, contributed to adaptation and increased virulence in our mammalian model.  相似文献   

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