Literature detail

The NS1 gene contributes to the virulence of H5N1 avian influenza viruses.

Zejun Li1 Yongping Jiang Peirong Jiao Aiqin Wang Fengju Zhao Guobin Tian Xijun Wang Kangzhen Yu Zhigao Bu Hualan Chen
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, CAAS, 427 Maduan Street, Harbin 150001, People's Republic of China.
PMID 16971424 2006 J Virol eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

In the present study, we explored the genetic basis underlying the virulence and host range of two H5N1 influenza viruses in chickens. A/goose/Guangdong/1/96 (GS/GD/1/96) is a highly pathogenic virus for chickens, whereas A/goose/Guangdong/2/96 (GS/GD/2/96) is unable to replicate in chickens. These two H5N1 viruses differ in sequence by only five amino acids mapping to the PA, NP, M1, and NS1 genes. We used reverse genetics to create four single-gene recombinants that contained one of the sequence-differing genes from nonpathogenic GS/GD/2/96 and the remaining seven gene segments from highly pathogenic GS/GD/1/96. We determined that the NS1 gene of GS/GD/2/96 inhibited the replication of GS/GD/1/96 in chickens, while the substitution of the PA, NP, or M gene did not change the highly pathogenic properties of GS/GD/1/96. Conversely, of the recombinant viruses generated in the GS/GD/2/96 background, only the virus containing the NS1 gene of GS/GD/1/96 was able to replicate and cause disease and death in chickens. The single-amino-acid difference in the sequence of these two NS1 genes resides at position 149. We demonstrate that a recombinant virus expressing the GS/GD/1/96 NS1 protein with Ala149 is able to antagonize the induction of interferon protein levels in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs), but a recombinant virus carrying a Val149 substitution is not capable of the same effect. These results indicate that the NS1 gene is critical for the pathogenicity of avian influenza virus in chickens and that the amino acid residue Ala149 correlates with the ability of these viruses to antagonize interferon induction in CEFs.

Amino Acid Substitution Animals Chick Embryo Chickens Disease Models, Animal Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype Influenza in Birds Interferons Mutation, Missense Nucleocapsid Proteins Nucleoproteins Recombination, Genetic RNA-Binding Proteins RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase Viral Core Proteins Viral Matrix Proteins Viral Nonstructural Proteins Viral Proteins

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Reverse-genetics host range experiments showed that only the recombinant H5N1 influenza virus containing the NS1 gene from GS/GD/1/96 replicated and caused disease in chickens, indicating NS1 Ala149 is critical for virulence and replication in this host.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

A/goose/Guangdong/1/96 (GS/GD/1/96) is a highly pathogenic virus for chickens, whereas A/goose/Guangdong/2/96 (GS/GD/2/96) is unable to replicate in chickens. We used reverse genetics to create four single-gene recombinants... The NS1 gene of GS/GD/2/96 inhibited the replication of GS/GD/1/96 in chickens, while ... only the virus containing the NS1 gene of GS/GD/1/96 was able to replicate and cause disease and death in chickens.

Method
reverse genetics; experimental infection; replication assay
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

In chicken embryo fibroblast cells, a recombinant H5N1 virus expressing the GS/GD/1/96 NS1 Ala149 variant inhibited interferon induction whereas the Val149 variant did not, indicating a molecular basis for differential replication competence.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We demonstrate that a recombinant virus expressing the GS/GD/1/96 NS1 protein with Ala149 is able to antagonize the induction of interferon protein levels in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs), but a recombinant virus carrying a Val149 substitution is not capable of the same effect.

Method
reverse genetics; replication assay
Sample type
cell culture
Experimental system
in vitro cell culture
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

A single amino acid substitution, Ala149 versus Val149, in the NS1 protein of H5N1 influenza virus determines its ability to antagonize interferon induction and thus influences replication and pathogenicity in chickens.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We demonstrate that a recombinant virus expressing the GS/GD/1/96 NS1 protein with Ala149 is able to antagonize the induction of interferon protein levels in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs), but a recombinant virus carrying a Val149 substitution is not capable of the same effect. These results indicate that the NS1 gene is critical for the pathogenicity of avian influenza virus in chickens and that the amino acid residue Ala149 correlates with the ability of these viruses to antagonize interferon induction in CEFs.

Genes or proteins
NS1
Host factors
interferon
Mutations
Ala149; Val149
Mechanism types
immune_escape; pathogenicity