Pappas Claudia, Yang Hua, Carney Paul J, Pearce Melissa B, Katz Jacqueline M, Stevens James, Tumpey Terrence M
Influenza Division, NCIRD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Influenza Division, NCIRD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Virology. 2015 Mar;477:61-71. doi: 10.1016/j.virol.2015.01.002. Epub 2015 Feb 5.
After their disappearance from the human population in 1968, influenza H2 viruses have continued to circulate in the natural avian reservoir. The isolation of this virus subtype from multiple bird species as well as swine highlights the need to better understand the potential of these viruses to spread and cause disease in humans. Here we analyzed the virulence, transmissibility and receptor-binding preference of two avian influenza H2 viruses (H2N2 and H2N3) and compared them to a swine H2N3 (A/swine/Missouri/2124514/2006 [swMO]), and a human H2N2 (A/England/10/1967 [Eng/67]) virus using the ferret model as a mammalian host. Both avian H2 viruses possessed the capacity to spread efficiently between cohoused ferrets, and the swine (swMO) and human (Eng/67) viruses transmitted to naïve ferrets by respiratory droplets. Further characterization of the swMO hemagglutinin (HA) by x-ray crystallography and glycan microarray array identified receptor-specific adaptive mutations. As influenza virus quasispecies dynamics during transmission have not been well characterized, we sequenced nasal washes collected during transmission studies to better understand experimental adaptation of H2 HA. The avian H2 viruses isolated from ferret nasal washes contained mutations in the HA1, including a Gln226Leu substitution, which is a mutation associated with α2,6 sialic acid (human-like) binding preference. These results suggest that the molecular structure of HA in viruses of the H2 subtype continue to have the potential to adapt to a mammalian host and become transmissible, after acquiring additional genetic markers.
自1968年从人类群体中消失后,H2型流感病毒继续在天然禽类宿主中传播。从多种鸟类以及猪身上分离出这种病毒亚型,凸显了更好地了解这些病毒在人类中传播和致病潜力的必要性。在此,我们分析了两种禽流感H2病毒(H2N2和H2N3)的毒力、传播性和受体结合偏好,并使用雪貂模型作为哺乳动物宿主,将它们与一种猪H2N3(A/猪/密苏里/2124514/2006 [swMO])和一种人H2N2(A/英格兰/10/1967 [Eng/67])病毒进行比较。两种禽H2病毒都有能力在同笼饲养的雪貂之间有效传播,而猪(swMO)和人(Eng/67)病毒通过呼吸道飞沫传播给未接触过病毒的雪貂。通过X射线晶体学和聚糖微阵列对swMO血凝素(HA)进行进一步表征,确定了受体特异性适应性突变。由于流感病毒在传播过程中的准种动态尚未得到很好的表征,我们对传播研究期间收集的鼻腔灌洗液进行测序,以更好地了解H2 HA的实验适应性。从雪貂鼻腔灌洗液中分离出的禽H2病毒在HA1中含有突变,包括Gln226Leu替换,这是一种与α2,6唾液酸(类人)结合偏好相关的突变。这些结果表明,H2亚型病毒中HA的分子结构在获得额外的遗传标记后,仍有适应哺乳动物宿主并变得可传播的潜力。