Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Sci Rep. 2018 Jul 11;8(1):10432. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-28706-1.
The limited ability of current influenza virus vaccines to protect from antigenically drifted or shifted viruses creates a public health problem that has led to the need to develop effective, broadly protective vaccines. While current influenza virus vaccines mostly induce an immune response against the immunodominant and variable head domain of the hemagglutinin, the major surface glycoprotein of the virus, the hemagglutinin stalk domain has been identified to harbor neutralizing B-cell epitopes that are conserved among and even between influenza A virus subtypes. A complete understanding of the differences in evolution between the main target of current vaccines and this more conserved stalk region are missing. Here, we performed an evolutionary analysis of the stalk domains of the hemagglutinin of pre-pandemic seasonal H1N1, pandemic H1N1, seasonal H3N2, and influenza B viruses and show quantitatively for the first time that the stalk domain is evolving at a rate that is significantly slower than that of the head domain. Additionally, we found that the cross-reactive epitopes in the stalk domain targeted by broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies are evolving at an even slower rate compared to the full head and stalk regions of the protein. Finally, a fixed-effects likelihood selection analysis was performed for these virus groups in both the head and stalk domains. While several positive selection sites were found in the head domain, only a single site in the stalk domain of pre-pandemic seasonal H1 hemagglutinin was identified at amino acid position 468 (H1 numbering from methionine). This site is not located in or close to the epitopes of cross-reactive anti-stalk monoclonal antibodies. Furthermore, we found that changes in this site do not significantly impact virus binding or neutralization by human anti-stalk antibodies, suggesting that some positive selection in the stalk domain is independent of immune pressures. We conclude that, while the stalk domain does evolve over time, this evolution is slow and, historically, is not directed to aid in evading neutralizing antibody responses.
当前流感病毒疫苗保护作用有限,无法预防抗原漂移或转变的病毒,这给公共卫生带来了问题,促使人们需要开发有效、广泛保护作用的疫苗。虽然当前流感病毒疫苗主要诱导针对病毒主要表面糖蛋白血凝素(HA)免疫优势和多变的头部结构域的免疫反应,但已鉴定出 HA 茎部结构域含有中和 B 细胞表位,这些表位在流感 A 病毒亚型之间甚至是同一亚型内都保守。目前对疫苗主要靶点与这种更保守茎部区域之间进化差异的了解还不完整。在这里,我们对大流行前季节性 H1N1、大流行 H1N1、季节性 H3N2 和 B 型流感病毒的 HA 茎部结构域进行了进化分析,首次定量表明茎部结构域的进化速度明显慢于头部结构域。此外,我们发现广泛中和单克隆抗体针对的茎部结构域交叉反应表位的进化速度甚至比蛋白质的全长头部和茎部区域还要慢。最后,对这些病毒组在头部和茎部结构域都进行了固定效应似然选择分析。虽然在头部结构域中发现了几个正选择位点,但仅在大流行前季节性 H1HA 的茎部结构域中鉴定到一个位于 468 位氨基酸(从蛋氨酸开始编号)的单一正选择位点。该位点不在或不靠近交叉反应抗茎部单克隆抗体的表位附近。此外,我们发现该位点的变化不会显著影响人类抗茎部抗体对病毒的结合或中和作用,这表明茎部结构域中的一些正选择独立于免疫压力。我们得出结论,虽然茎部结构域随时间发生进化,但这种进化速度缓慢,且历史上并没有朝着逃避中和抗体反应的方向进行。