Change in Receptor-Binding Specificity of Recent Human Influenza A Viruses (H3N2): A Single Amino Acid Change in Hemagglutinin Altered Its Recognition of Sialyloligosaccharides

2000 
Abstract Human H3N2 influenza A viruses were known to preferentially bind to sialic acid (SA) in α2,6Gal linkage on red blood cells (RBC). However, H3N2 viruses isolated in MDCK cells after 1992 did not agglutinate chicken RBC (CRBC). Experiments with point-mutated hemagglutinin (HA) of A/Aichi/51/92, one of these viruses, revealed that an amino acid change from Glu to Asp at position 190 (E190D) was responsible for the loss of ability to bind to CRBC. A/Aichi/51/92 did not agglutinate CRBC treated with α2,3-sialidase, suggesting that SAα2,3Gal on CRBC might not inhibit the binding of the virus to SAα2,6Gal on CRBC. However, the virus agglutinated derivatized CRBC resialylated with SAα2,6Galβ1,4GlcNAc. These findings suggested that the E190D change might have rendered the HA able to distinguish sialyloligosaccharides on the derivatized CRBC containing the SAα2,6Galβ1,4GlcNAc sequence from those on the native CRBC.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    36
    References
    145
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []