Department of Global Epidemiology, Hokkaido University Research Center for Zoonosis Control, Sapporo, Japan.
PLoS One. 2010 Jan 1;5(1):e8553. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008553.
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.
最近,大流行性流感病毒(2009 H1N1)传入人类群体。2009 H1N1 的血凝素(HA)基因来源于“经典猪 H1N1”病毒,该病毒可能与导致 1918 年大流行的人类 H1N1 病毒拥有共同祖先,其后代病毒仍然在人类群体中循环,HA 的抗原性发生了高度改变。然而,关于比较 2009 H1N1、1918 年大流行和季节性人类 H1N1 病毒之间 HA 抗原性的结构基础的信息一直缺乏。通过 HA 结构的同源建模,我们在这里显示 2009 H1N1 和 1918 年大流行病毒的 HAs 在已知抗原位点共享大量的氨基酸残基,这表明存在针对两种 HA 具有交叉中和抗体反应的共同表位。值得注意的是,20 世纪 30 年代至 40 年代分离的早期人类 H1N1 病毒仍然保留了一些原始表位,这些表位也存在于 2009 H1N1 中。有趣的是,尽管 2009 H1N1 HA 缺乏与该病毒早期流行期间人类 H1N1 病毒的抗原性改变相关的多个 N-糖基化,但 2009 H1N1 HA 仍然保留独特的三个密码子基序,其中一些通过人类 H1N1 病毒中的单个核苷酸突变成为 N-糖基化位点。因此,我们假设涉及保守氨基酸的 2009 H1N1 HA 抗原位点将很快成为人类抗体介导的选择压力的靶标。事实上,这里预测的氨基酸取代正在最近的 2009 H1N1 变体中发生。本研究表明,由 1918 年大流行或其早期后代病毒自然感染引起的抗体在针对 2009 H1N1 的特异性免疫中发挥作用,并为了解 2009 H1N1 在人类群体中的进化过程中未来可能的抗原性变化提供了一个视角。