Literature detail

Reversion of PB2-627E to -627K during replication of an H5N1 Clade 2.2 virus in mammalian hosts depends on the origin of the nucleoprotein.

Jessica Bogs1 Donata Kalthoff Jutta Veits Sophia Pavlova Martin Schwemmle Benjamin Mänz Thomas C Mettenleiter Jürgen Stech
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Institute of Molecular Biology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Federal Research Institute for Animal Health, Südufer 10, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany.
PMID 21849466 2011 J Virol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIV) of clade 2.2 spread from Southeast Asia to Europe. Intriguingly, in contrast to all common avian strains specifying glutamic acid at position 627 of the PB2 protein (PB2-627E), they carry a lysine at this position (PB2-627K), which is normally found only in human strains. To analyze the impact of this mutation on the host range of HPAIV H5N1, we altered PB2-627K to PB2-627E in the European isolate A/Swan/Germany/R65/2006 (R65). In contrast to the parental R65, multicycle growth and polymerase activity of the resulting mutant R65-PB2(K627E) were considerably impaired in mammalian but not in avian cells. Correspondingly, the 50% lethal dose (LD₅₀) in mice was increased by three orders of magnitude, whereas virulence in chicken remained unchanged, resulting in 100% lethality, as was found for the parental R65. Strikingly, R65-PB2(K627E) reverted to PB2-627K after only one passage in mice but did not revert in chickens. To investigate whether additional R65 genes influence reversion, we passaged R65-PB2(K627E) reassortants containing genes from A/Hong Kong/156/97 (H5N1) (carrying PB2-627E), in avian and mammalian cells. Reversion to PB2-627K in mammalian cells required the presence of the R65 nucleoprotein (NP). This finding corresponds to results of others that during replication of avian strains in mammalian cells, PB2-627K restores an impaired PB2-NP association. Since this mutation is apparently not detrimental for virus prevalence in birds, it has not been eliminated. However, the prompt reversion to PB2-627K in MDCK cells and mice suggests that the clade 2.2 H5N1 HPAIV may have had a history of intermediate mammalian hosts.

Host Specificity Mutation, Missense Amino Acid Substitution Animals Birds Cell Line Chickens Disease Models, Animal Female Humans Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype Lethal Dose 50 Mice Mice, Inbred BALB C Orthomyxoviridae Infections Poultry Diseases RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase Rodent Diseases

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

5 total
3 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

An H5N1 clade 2.2 mutant with PB2-K627E showed impaired replication in mammalian but not avian cells and reduced virulence in mice while maintaining full virulence in chickens.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

In contrast to the parental R65, multicycle growth and polymerase activity of the resulting mutant R65-PB2(K627E) were considerably impaired in mammalian but not in avian cells. Correspondingly, the 50% lethal dose (LD50) in mice was increased by three orders of magnitude, whereas virulence in chicken remained unchanged, resulting in 100% lethality, as was found for the parental R65.

Method
experimental infection; lethal dose determination
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

The PB2-K627E mutant reverted rapidly to the mammalian-adaptive PB2-627K during replication in mice but not in chickens, showing host-dependent reversion.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

R65-PB2(K627E) reverted to PB2-627K after only one passage in mice but did not revert in chickens.

Method
experimental infection; passage experiment
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

PB2-K627E reverted to PB2-627K after passage in MDCK cells, supporting adaptation of H5N1 clade 2.2 viruses to mammalian cells.

Virus
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The prompt reversion to PB2-627K in MDCK cells and mice suggests that the clade 2.2 H5N1 HPAIV may have had a history of intermediate mammalian hosts.

Method
cell passage; replication assay
Experimental system
in vitro cell culture
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

During replication of the clade 2.2 H5N1 virus in mammalian hosts, PB2 reverted from glutamic acid to lysine at position 627, and this reversion depended on the origin of the nucleoprotein gene.

Virus
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Strikingly, R65-PB2(K627E) reverted to PB2-627K after only one passage in mice but did not revert in chickens. Reversion to PB2-627K in mammalian cells required the presence of the R65 nucleoprotein (NP).

Genes or proteins
PB2; NP
Analysis methods
mutational analysis; experimental passage
1 records
Extraction confidence 1.00
Key finding

PB2-627K facilitates adaptation of H5N1 clade 2.2 virus to mammalian hosts through improved PB2-NP interaction, with reversion to K627 occurring in mammalian cells and mice but not in avian hosts.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Reversion of R65-PB2(K627E) to PB2-627K occurred after only one passage in mice but not in chickens, and reversion in mammalian cells required the presence of the R65 nucleoprotein (NP).

Genes or proteins
PB2; nucleoprotein (NP)
Mutations
PB2 E627K
Mechanism types
polymerase_activity; host_factor_interaction; replication_efficiency; pathogenicity