Complex N-glycans are important for interspecies transmission of H7 influenza A viruses

Publication date

2024-04

Authors

Spruit, Cindy MariaISNI 000000050744332X
Palme, Diana I
Li, Tiehai
Ríos Carrasco, MaríaISNI 0000000526330806
Gabarroca García, Alba
Sweet, Igor R.ISNI 0000000492816954
Kuryshko, Maryna
Maliepaard, Joshua C.L.ISNI 0000000493617754
Reiding, KarliISNI 0000000492915522
Scheibner, David

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Influenza A viruses (IAVs) can overcome species barriers by adaptation of the receptor-binding site of the hemagglutinin (HA). To initiate infection, HAs bind to glycan receptors with terminal sialic acids, which are either N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuAc) or N-glycolylneuraminic acid (NeuGc); the latter is mainly found in horses and pigs but not in birds and humans. We investigated the influence of previously identified equine NeuGc-adapting mutations (S128T, I130V, A135E, T189A, and K193R) in avian H7 IAVs in vitro and in vivo. We observed that these mutations negatively affected viral replication in chicken cells but not in duck cells and positively affected replication in horse cells. In vivo, the mutations reduced virus virulence and mortality in chickens. Ducks excreted high viral loads longer than chickens, although they appeared clinically healthy. To elucidate why these viruses infected chickens and ducks despite the absence of NeuGc, we re-evaluated the receptor binding of H7 HAs using glycan microarray and flow cytometry studies. This re-evaluation demonstrated that mutated avian H7 HAs also bound to α2,3-linked NeuAc and sialyl-LewisX, which have an additional fucose moiety in their terminal epitope, explaining why infection of ducks and chickens was possible. Interestingly, the α2,3-linked NeuAc and sialyl-LewisX epitopes were only bound when presented on tri-antennary N-glycans, emphasizing the importance of investigating the fine receptor specificities of IAVs. In conclusion, the binding of NeuGc-adapted H7 IAV to tri-antennary N-glycans enables viral replication and shedding by chickens and ducks, potentially facilitating interspecies transmission of equine-adapted H7 IAVs.

Keywords

Taverne, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Spruit, C M, Palme, D I, Li, T, Ríos Carrasco, M, Gabarroca García, A, Sweet, I R, Kuryshko, M, Maliepaard, J C L, Reiding, K R, Scheibner, D, Boons, G-J, Abdelwhab, E M & de Vries, R P 2024, 'Complex N-glycans are important for interspecies transmission of H7 influenza A viruses', Journal of Virology, vol. 98, no. 4, e0194123. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01941-23