Abstract
ABSTRACTInfluenza A viruses have regularly jumped to new hosts to cause epidemics or pandemics, an evolutionary process that involves variation in the viral traits necessary to overcome host barriers and facilitate transmission. Mice are not a natural host for influenza virus, but are frequently used as models in studies of pathogenesis, often after multiple passages to achieve higher viral titers that result in clinical disease such as weight loss or death. Here we examine the processes of influenza A virus infection and evolution in mice by comparing deep sequence variation of a human H1N1 pandemic virus, a seasonal H3N2 virus, and a H3N2 canine influenza virus during experimental passage. We also compared replication and sequence variation in wild-type mice expressing N-glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc) with that seen in mice expressing only N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac). Viruses derived from plasmids were propagated in MDCK cells and then passaged in mice up to four times. Full genome deep sequencing of the plasmids, cultured viruses, and viruses from mice at various passages revealed only small numbers of mutational changes. The H3N2 canine influenza virus showed increases in frequency of sporadic mutations in the PB2, PA, and NA segments. The H1N1 pandemic virus grew well in mice, and while it exhibited the maintenance of some minority mutations, there was no clear adaptive evolution. The H3N2 seasonal virus did not establish in the mice. Finally, there were no clear sequence differences associated with the presence or absence of Neu5Gc.SIGNIFICANCEMice are commonly used as a model to study the growth and virulence of influenza A viruses in mammals, but are not a natural host and have distinct sialic acid receptor profiles compared to humans. Using experimental infections with different subtypes of influenza A virus derived from different hosts we found that evolution of influenza A virus in mice did not necessarily proceed through the linear accumulation of host-adaptive mutations, that there was variation in the patterns of mutations detected in each repetition, and the mutation dynamics depended on the virus examined. In addition, variation in the viral receptor, sialic acid, did not effect influenza evolution in this model. Overall this shows that mice provide a useful animal model for influenza, but that host passage evolution will vary depending on the virus being tested.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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