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Virulence and Genetic Compatibility of Polymerase Reassortant Viruses Derived from the Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 Influenza Virus and Circulating Influenza A Viruses

Authors
Song, Min-SukPascua, Philippe Noriel Q.Lee, Jun HanBaek, Yun HeePark, Kuk JinKwon, Hyeok-ilPark, Su-JinKim, Chul-JoongKim, HyunggeeWebby, Richard J.Webster, Robert G.Choi, Young Ki
Issue Date
7월-2011
Publisher
AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
Citation
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, v.85, no.13, pp.6275 - 6286
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume
85
Number
13
Start Page
6275
End Page
6286
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/112191
DOI
10.1128/JVI.02125-10
ISSN
0022-538X
Abstract
Gene mutations and reassortment are key mechanisms by which influenza A virus acquires virulence factors. To evaluate the role of the viral polymerase replication machinery in producing virulent pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza viruses, we generated various polymerase point mutants (PB2, 627K/701N; PB1, expression of PB1-F2 protein; and PA, 97I) and reassortant viruses with various sources of influenza viruses by reverse genetics. Although the point mutations produced no significant change in pathogenicity, reassortment between the pandemic A/California/04/09 (CA04, H1N1) and current human and animal influenza viruses produced variants possessing a broad spectrum of pathogenicity in the mouse model. Although most polymerase reassortants had attenuated pathogenicity (including those containing seasonal human H3N2 and high-pathogenicity H5N1 virus segments) compared to that of the parental CA04 (H1N1) virus, some recombinants had significantly enhanced virulence. Unexpectedly, one of the five highly virulent reassortants contained a A/Swine/Korea/JNS06/04(H3N2)-like PB2 gene with no known virulence factors; the other four had mammalian-passaged avian-like genes encoding PB2 featuring 627K, PA featuring 97I, or both. Overall, the reassorted polymerase complexes were only moderately compatible for virus rescue, probably because of disrupted molecular interactions involving viral or host proteins. Although we observed close cooperation between PB2 and PB1 from similar virus origins, we found that PA appears to be crucial in maintaining viral gene functions in the context of the CA04 (H1N1) virus. These observations provide helpful insights into the pathogenic potential of reassortant influenza viruses composed of the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus and prevailing human or animal influenza viruses that could emerge in the future.
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