Continued adaptation of A/H2N2 viruses during pandemic circulation in humans
Publication date
2023-08-31
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Abstract
Influenza A viruses of the H2N2 subtype sparked a pandemic in 1957 and circulated in humans until 1968. Because A/H2N2 viruses still circulate in wild birds worldwide and human population immunity is low, the transmissibility of six avian A/H2N2 viruses was investigated in the ferret model. None of the avian A/H2N2 viruses was transmitted between ferrets, suggesting that their pandemic risk may be low. The transmissibility, receptor binding preference and haemagglutinin (HA) stability of human A/H2N2 viruses were also investigated. Human A/H2N2 viruses from 1957 and 1958 bound to human-type α2,6-linked sialic acid receptors, but the 1958 virus had a more stable HA, indicating adaptation to replication and spread in the new host. This increased stability was caused by a previously unknown stability substitution G205S in the 1958 H2N2 HA, which became fixed in A/H2N2 viruses after 1958. Although individual substitutions were identified that affected the HA receptor binding and stability properties, they were not found to have a substantial effect on transmissibility of A/H2N2 viruses via the air in the ferret model. Our data demonstrate that A/H2N2 viruses continued to adapt during the first year of pandemic circulation in humans, similar to what was previously shown for the A/H1N1pdm09 virus.
Keywords
A/H2N2 virus, airborne transmissibility, HA, receptor specificity, stability, Taverne, Virology
Citation
Kutter, J S, Linster, M, de Meulder, D, Bestebroer, T M, Lexmond, P, Rosu, M E, Richard, M, de Vries, R P, Fouchier, R A M & Herfst, S 2023, 'Continued adaptation of A/H2N2 viruses during pandemic circulation in humans', Journal of General Virology, vol. 104, no. 8, 001881. https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001881