H3N2 influenza A virus gradually adapts to human-type receptor binding and entry specificity after the start of the 1968 pandemic

Publication date

2023-08-01

Authors

Liu, MengyingISNI 0000000512552256
Bakker, A Sophie
Narimatsu, Yoshiki
van Kuppeveld, Frank J MISNI 0000000369420196
Clausen, Henrik
de Haan, Cornelis A MORCID 0000-0002-4459-9874ISNI 0000000395765470
de Vries, ErikISNI 0000000393812384

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Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

To become established upon zoonotic transfer, influenza A viruses (IAV) need to switch binding from "avian-type" α2-3-linked sialic acid receptors (2-3Sia) to "human-type" Siaα2-6-linked sialic acid receptors (2-6Sia). For the 1968 H3N2 pandemic virus, this was accomplished by two canonical amino acid substitutions in its hemagglutinin (HA) although a full specificity shift had not occurred. The receptor repertoire on epithelial cells is highly diverse and simultaneous interaction of a virus particle with a range of low- to very low-affinity receptors results in tight heteromultivalent binding. How this range of affinities determines binding selectivity and virus motility remains largely unknown as the analysis of low-affinity monovalent HA-receptor interactions is technically challenging. Here, a biolayer interferometry assay enabled a comprehensive analysis of receptor-binding kinetics evolution upon host-switching. Virus-binding kinetics of H3N2 virus isolates slowly evolved from 1968 to 1979 from mixed 2-3/2-6Sia specificity to high 2-6Sia specificity, surprisingly followed by a decline in selectivity after 1992. By using genetically tuned HEK293 cells, presenting either a simplified 2-3Sia- or 2-6Sia-specific receptor repertoire, receptor-specific binding was shown to correlate strongly with receptor-specific entry. In conclusion, the slow and continuous evolution of entry and receptor-binding specificity of seasonal H3N2 viruses contrasts with the paradigm that human IAVs need to rapidly acquire and maintain a high specificity for 2-6Sia. Analysis of the kinetic parameters of receptor binding provides a basis for understanding virus-binding specificity, motility, and HA/neuraminidase balance at the molecular level.

Keywords

affinity, binding kinetics, entry, evolution, influenza A virus, General

Citation

Liu, M, Bakker, A S, Narimatsu, Y, van Kuppeveld, F J M, Clausen, H, de Haan, C A M & de Vries, E 2023, 'H3N2 influenza A virus gradually adapts to human-type receptor binding and entry specificity after the start of the 1968 pandemic', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 120, no. 31, e2304992120. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2304992120