Klein Eili Y, Blumenkrantz Deena, Serohijos Adrian, Shakhnovich Eugene, Choi Jeong-Mo, Rodrigues João V, Smith Brendan D, Lane Andrew P, Feldman Andrew, Pekosz Andrew
Department of Emergency Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy, Washington, DC, USA.
mSphere. 2018 Jan 3;3(1). doi: 10.1128/mSphereDirect.00554-17. eCollection 2018 Jan-Feb.
Protein thermodynamics are an integral determinant of viral fitness and one of the major drivers of protein evolution. Mutations in the influenza A virus (IAV) hemagglutinin (HA) protein can eliminate neutralizing antibody binding to mediate escape from preexisting antiviral immunity. Prior research on the IAV nucleoprotein suggests that protein stability may constrain seasonal IAV evolution; however, the role of stability in shaping the evolutionary dynamics of the HA protein has not been explored. We used the full coding sequence of 9,797 H1N1pdm09 HA sequences and 16,716 human seasonal H3N2 HA sequences to computationally estimate relative changes in the thermal stability of the HA protein between 2009 and 2016. Phylogenetic methods were used to characterize how stability differences impacted the evolutionary dynamics of the virus. We found that pandemic H1N1 IAV strains split into two lineages that had different relative HA protein stabilities and that later variants were descended from the higher-stability lineage. Analysis of the mutations associated with the selective sweep of the higher-stability lineage found that they were characterized by the early appearance of highly stabilizing mutations, the earliest of which was not located in a known antigenic site. Experimental evidence further suggested that H1N1 HA stability may be correlated with virus production and infection. A similar analysis of H3N2 strains found that surviving lineages were also largely descended from viruses predicted to encode more-stable HA proteins. Our results suggest that HA protein stability likely plays a significant role in the persistence of different IAV lineages. One of the constraints on fast-evolving viruses, such as influenza virus, is protein stability, or how strongly the folded protein holds together. Despite the importance of this protein property, there has been limited investigation of the impact of the stability of the influenza virus hemagglutinin protein-the primary antibody target of the immune system-on its evolution. Using a combination of computational estimates of stability and experiments, our analysis found that viruses with more-stable hemagglutinin proteins were associated with long-term persistence in the population. There are two potential reasons for the observed persistence. One is that more-stable proteins tolerate destabilizing mutations that less-stable proteins could not, thus increasing opportunities for immune escape. The second is that greater stability increases the fitness of the virus through increased production of infectious particles. Further research on the relative importance of these mechanisms could help inform the annual influenza vaccine composition decision process.
蛋白质热力学是病毒适应性的一个重要决定因素,也是蛋白质进化的主要驱动力之一。甲型流感病毒(IAV)血凝素(HA)蛋白中的突变可消除中和抗体结合,从而介导逃避预先存在的抗病毒免疫。先前对IAV核蛋白的研究表明,蛋白质稳定性可能会限制季节性IAV的进化;然而,稳定性在塑造HA蛋白进化动态中的作用尚未得到探索。我们使用9797条甲型H1N1pdm09 HA序列和16716条人类季节性H3N2 HA序列的完整编码序列,通过计算估计2009年至2016年间HA蛋白热稳定性的相对变化。采用系统发育方法来表征稳定性差异如何影响病毒的进化动态。我们发现,大流行的甲型H1N1 IAV毒株分为两个具有不同相对HA蛋白稳定性的谱系,后来的变体来自更高稳定性的谱系。对与更高稳定性谱系的选择性清除相关的突变分析发现,它们的特征是高度稳定突变的早期出现,其中最早的突变并不位于已知的抗原位点。实验证据进一步表明,H1N1 HA稳定性可能与病毒产生和感染相关。对H3N2毒株的类似分析发现,存活谱系也主要来自预计编码更稳定HA蛋白的病毒。我们的结果表明,HA蛋白稳定性可能在不同IAV谱系的持续存在中发挥重要作用。对快速进化的病毒(如流感病毒)的一个限制因素是蛋白质稳定性,即折叠后的蛋白质结合的紧密程度。尽管这种蛋白质特性很重要,但对于流感病毒血凝素蛋白(免疫系统的主要抗体靶点)的稳定性对其进化的影响,研究一直有限。通过结合稳定性的计算估计和实验,我们的分析发现,血凝素蛋白更稳定的病毒与在群体中的长期持续存在有关。观察到的持续性有两个潜在原因。一是更稳定的蛋白质能够耐受不稳定蛋白质无法耐受的去稳定突变,从而增加了免疫逃逸的机会。二是更高的稳定性通过增加感染性颗粒的产生来提高病毒的适应性。对这些机制相对重要性的进一步研究可能有助于为年度流感疫苗成分决策过程提供信息。