Danzy Shamika, Studdard Lydia R, Manicassamy Balaji, Solorzano Alicia, Marshall Nicolle, García-Sastre Adolfo, Steel John, Lowen Anice C
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Department of Microbiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
J Virol. 2014 Nov;88(22):13436-46. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01093-14. Epub 2014 Sep 10.
Influenza pandemics occur when influenza A viruses (IAV) adapted to other host species enter humans and spread through the population. Pandemics are relatively rare due to host restriction of IAV: strains adapted to nonhuman species do not readily infect, replicate in, or transmit among humans. IAV can overcome host restriction through reassortment or adaptive evolution, and these are mechanisms by which pandemic strains arise in nature. To identify mutations that facilitate growth of avian IAV in humans, we have adapted influenza A/duck/Alberta/35/1976 (H1N1) (dk/AB/76) virus to a high-growth phenotype in differentiated human tracheo-bronchial epithelial (HTBE) cells. Following 10 serial passages of three independent lineages, the bulk populations showed similar growth in HTBE cells to that of a human seasonal virus. The coding changes present in six clonal isolates were determined. The majority of changes were located in the polymerase complex and nucleoprotein (NP), and all isolates carried mutations in the PB2 627 domain and regions of NP thought to interact with PB2. Using reverse genetics, the impact on growth and polymerase activity of individual and paired mutations in PB2 and NP was evaluated. The results indicate that coupling of the mammalian-adaptive mutation PB2 E627K or Q591K to selected mutations in NP further augments the growth of the corresponding viruses. In addition, minimal combinations of three (PB2 Q236H, E627K, and NP N309K) or two (PB2 Q591K and NP S50G) mutations were sufficient to recapitulate the efficient growth in HTBE cells of dk/AB/76 viruses isolated after 10 passages in this substrate.
Influenza A viruses adapted to birds do not typically grow well in humans. However, as has been seen recently with H5N1 and H7N9 subtype viruses, productive and virulent infection of humans with avian influenza viruses can occur. The ability of avian influenza viruses to adapt to new host species is a consequence of their high mutation rate that supports their zoonotic potential. Understanding of the adaptation of avian viruses to mammals strengthens public health efforts aimed at controlling influenza. In particular, it is critical to know how readily and through mutation to which functional components avian influenza viruses gain the ability to grow efficiently in humans. Our data show that as few as three mutations, in the PB2 and NP proteins, support robust growth of a low-pathogenic, H1N1 duck isolate in primary human respiratory cells.
当适应其他宿主物种的甲型流感病毒(IAV)进入人类并在人群中传播时,就会发生流感大流行。由于IAV存在宿主限制,大流行相对罕见:适应非人类物种的毒株不易感染人类、在人类体内复制或在人类之间传播。IAV可通过重配或适应性进化克服宿主限制,这些是自然界中产生大流行毒株的机制。为了鉴定促进禽IAV在人类中生长的突变,我们已使甲型流感病毒A/鸭/艾伯塔/35/1976(H1N1)(dk/AB/76)在分化的人气管支气管上皮(HTBE)细胞中适应高生长表型。在三个独立谱系进行10次连续传代后,总体群体在HTBE细胞中的生长与人类季节性病毒相似。确定了六个克隆分离株中存在的编码变化。大多数变化位于聚合酶复合体和核蛋白(NP)中,所有分离株在PB2 627结构域和被认为与PB2相互作用的NP区域均携带突变。利用反向遗传学,评估了PB2和NP中单个及成对突变对生长和聚合酶活性的影响。结果表明,将哺乳动物适应性突变PB2 E627K或Q591K与NP中的选定突变相结合,可进一步增强相应病毒的生长。此外,三个(PB2 Q236H、E627K和NP N309K)或两个(PB2 Q591K和NP S50G)突变的最小组合足以重现dk/AB/76病毒在该底物中传代10次后分离株在HTBE细胞中的高效生长。
适应鸟类的甲型流感病毒通常在人类中生长不佳。然而,正如最近在H5N1和H7N9亚型病毒中所见,禽流感病毒可对人类产生有传染性且具毒性的感染。禽流感病毒适应新宿主物种的能力是其高突变率的结果,这种高突变率支持了它们的人畜共患病潜力。了解禽流感病毒对哺乳动物的适应性有助于加强旨在控制流感的公共卫生工作。特别是,关键在于了解禽流感病毒通过突变对哪些功能成分能多快获得在人类中高效生长的能力。我们的数据表明,PB2和NP蛋白中仅三个突变就能支持低致病性H1N1鸭分离株在原代人呼吸道细胞中的强劲生长。