Blackburne Benjamin P, Hay Alan J, Goldstein Richard A
Division of Mathematical Biology, National Institute of Medical Research, Mill Hill, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Pathog. 2008 May 2;4(5):e1000058. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000058.
The rapid evolution of influenza viruses presents difficulties in maintaining the optimal efficiency of vaccines. Amino acid substitutions result in antigenic drift, a process whereby antisera raised in response to one virus have reduced effectiveness against future viruses. Interestingly, while amino acid substitutions occur at a relatively constant rate, the antigenic properties of H3 move in a discontinuous, step-wise manner. It is not clear why this punctuated evolution occurs, whether this represents simply the fact that some substitutions affect these properties more than others, or if this is indicative of a changing relationship between the virus and the host. In addition, the role of changing glycosylation of the haemagglutinin in these shifts in antigenic properties is unknown. We analysed the antigenic drift of HA1 from human influenza H3 using a model of sequence change that allows for variation in selective pressure at different locations in the sequence, as well as at different parts of the phylogenetic tree. We detect significant changes in selective pressure that occur preferentially during major changes in antigenic properties. Despite the large increase in glycosylation during the past 40 years, changes in glycosylation did not correlate either with changes in antigenic properties or with significantly more rapid changes in selective pressure. The locations that undergo changes in selective pressure are largely in places undergoing adaptive evolution, in antigenic locations, and in locations or near locations undergoing substitutions that characterise the change in antigenicity of the virus. Our results suggest that the relationship of the virus to the host changes with time, with the shifts in antigenic properties representing changes in this relationship. This suggests that the virus and host immune system are evolving different methods to counter each other. While we are able to characterise the rapid increase in glycosylation of the haemagglutinin during time in human influenza H3, an increase not present in influenza in birds, this increase seems unrelated to the observed changes in antigenic properties.
流感病毒的快速进化给维持疫苗的最佳效力带来了困难。氨基酸替换导致抗原漂移,即针对一种病毒产生的抗血清对未来病毒的效力降低的过程。有趣的是,虽然氨基酸替换以相对恒定的速率发生,但H3的抗原特性以不连续的、逐步的方式变化。尚不清楚为何会发生这种间断性进化,这是仅仅因为某些替换对这些特性的影响大于其他替换,还是表明病毒与宿主之间的关系在发生变化。此外,血凝素糖基化变化在这些抗原特性转变中的作用尚不清楚。我们使用一种序列变化模型分析了人源流感H3的HA1的抗原漂移,该模型允许序列中不同位置以及系统发育树不同部分的选择压力存在差异。我们检测到在抗原特性发生重大变化期间优先出现的选择压力的显著变化。尽管在过去40年中糖基化大幅增加,但糖基化变化与抗原特性变化或选择压力的显著更快变化均无关联。经历选择压力变化的位置主要位于经历适应性进化的地方、抗原位置以及经历表征病毒抗原性变化的替换的位置或其附近。我们的结果表明,病毒与宿主的关系随时间变化,抗原特性的转变代表了这种关系的变化。这表明病毒和宿主免疫系统正在进化出相互对抗的不同方法。虽然我们能够描述人源流感H3中血凝素糖基化随时间的快速增加,而这种增加在禽流感中不存在,但这种增加似乎与观察到的抗原特性变化无关。