2 results match your criteria: "University of Ottawa 451 Smyth Rd[Affiliation]"

Influenza A virus NS1 gene mutations F103L and M106I increase replication and virulence.

Virol J

January 2011

Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa 451 Smyth Rd, Ottawa, Ontario K1H8M5, Canada.

Background: To understand the evolutionary steps required for a virus to become virulent in a new host, a human influenza A virus (IAV), A/Hong Kong/1/68(H3N2) (HK-wt), was adapted to increased virulence in the mouse. Among eleven mutations selected in the NS1 gene, two mutations F103L and M106I had been previously detected in the highly virulent human H5N1 isolate, A/HK/156/97, suggesting a role for these mutations in virulence in mice and humans.

Results: To determine the selective advantage of these mutations, reverse genetics was used to rescue viruses containing each of the NS1 mouse adapted mutations into viruses possessing the HK-wt NS1 gene on the A/PR/8/34 genetic backbone.

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