An R195K Mutation in the PA-X Protein Increases the Virulence and Transmission of Influenza A Virus in Mammalian Hosts

Author:

Sun Yipeng1,Hu Zhe1,Zhang Xuxiao1,Chen Mingyue1,Wang Zhen1,Xu Guanlong1,Bi Yuhai2,Tong Qi1,Wang Mingyang1,Sun Honglei1,Pu Juan1,Iqbal Munir3ORCID,Liu Jinhua1

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Animal Epidemiology of the Ministry of Agriculture, College of Veterinary Medicine, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China

2. CAS Key Laboratory of Pathogenic Microbiology and Immunology, Collaborative Innovation Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Disease, Institute of Microbiology, Center for Influenza Research and Early Warning (CASCIRE), Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

3. The Pirbright Institute, Pirbright, Woking, Surrey, United Kingdom

Abstract

Four influenza pandemics in humans (the Spanish flu of 1918 [H1N1], the Asian flu of 1957 [H2N2], the Hong Kong flu of 1968 [H3N2], and the swine origin flu of 2009 [H1N1]) are all proposed to have been caused by avian or swine influenza viruses that acquired virulence factors through adaptive mutation or reassortment with circulating human viruses. Currently, influenza viruses circulating in animals are repeatedly transmitted to humans, posing a significant threat to public health. However, the molecular properties accounting for interspecies transmission of influenza viruses remain unclear. In the present study, we demonstrated that PA-X plays an important role in cross-species transmission of influenza viruses. At least three human-specific amino acid substitutions in PA-X dramatically enhanced the adaptation of animal influenza viruses in mammals. In particular, PA-X 195K might have contributed to cross-species transmission of H7N9, H5N6, and H1N1/2009 viruses from animal reservoirs to humans.

Funder

Chang Jiang Scholars

Newton Advanced Fellowships from the Royal Society

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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