AI Article Synopsis

  • The study introduced 248 mutations to the hemagglutinin (HA) protein of the H3N2 flu strain and assessed their impact on hemadsorption activity, revealing that about 44% of the changes preserved this activity in vitro, versus an estimated 39.6% in nature, suggesting immune pressure affects natural isolates.
  • It was found that 26 of the mutated amino acid changes matched those observed in HA protein changes from 1968 to 2000, with 25 being beneficial, indicating that evolutionary changes in HA are often positive.
  • Finally, two-point mutations created from positive mutants did not hinder hemadsorption, suggesting that multiple mutations can accumulate without losing function, and specific gaps between smaller antigenic sites on

Article Abstract

We introduced 248 single-point amino acid changes into hemagglutinin (HA) protein of the A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2) strain by a PCR random mutation method. These changes were classified as positive or negative according to their effect on hemadsorption activity. We observed following results. (i) The percentage of surviving amino acid changes on the HA1 domain that did not abrogate hemadsorption activity was calculated to be ca. 44%. In nature, it is estimated to be ca. 39.6%. This difference in surviving amino acid changes on the HA protein between natural isolates and in vitro mutants might be due to the immune pressure against the former. (ii) A total of 26 amino acid changes in the in vitro mutants matched those at which mainstream amino acid changes had occurred in the H3HA1 polypeptide from 1968 to 2000. Of these, 25 were positive. We suggest that the majority of amino acid changes on the HA protein during evolution might be restricted to those that were positive on the HA of A/Aichi/2/68. (iii) We constructed two-point amino acid changes on the HA protein by using positive mutants. These two-point amino acid changes with a random combination did not inhibit hemadsorption activity. It is possible that an accumulation of amino acid change might occur without order. (iv) From the analysis of amino acids participating in mainstream amino acid change, each antigenic site could be further divided into smaller sites. The amino acid substitutions in the gaps between these smaller sites resulted in mostly hemadsorption-negative changes. These gap positions may play an important role in maintaining the function of the HA protein, and therefore amino acid changes are restricted at these locations.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC224596PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.77.18.10088-10098.2003DOI Listing

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