Abstract

Relatively little is known about the viral factors contributing to the lethality of the 1918 pandemic, although its unparalleled virulence was likely due in part to the newly discovered PB1-F2 protein. This protein, while unnecessary for replication, increases apoptosis in monocytes, alters viral polymerase activity in vitro, enhances inflammation and increases secondary pneumonia in vivo. However, the effects the PB1-F2 protein have in vivo remain unclear. To address the mechanisms involved, we intranasally infected groups of mice with either influenza A virus PR8 or a genetically engineered virus that expresses the 1918 PB1-F2 protein on a PR8 background, PR8-PB1-F2(1918). Mice inoculated with PR8 had viral concentrations peaking at 72 hours, while those infected with PR8-PB1-F2(1918) reached peak concentrations earlier, 48 hours. Mice given PR8-PB1-F2(1918) also showed a faster decline in viral loads. We fit a mathematical model to these data to estimate parameter values. The model supports a higher viral production rate per cell and a higher infected cell death rate with the PR8-PB1-F2(1918) virus. We discuss the implications these mechanisms have during an infection with a virus expressing a virulent PB1-F2 on the possibility of a pandemic and on the importance of antiviral treatments.

Highlights

  • The most deadly influenza pandemic documented occurred in 1918–1919 with over 40 million deaths worldwide [1]

  • Viral Titers of Mice Infected With Influenza Puerto Rico/ 8/34 (H1N1) virus (PR8) or PR8PB1-F2(1918)

  • We explored the in vivo kinetics of the mouse adapted PR8 and a variant of PR8 that expresses the PB1-F2 protein from the 1918 influenza strain (PR8-PB1-F2(1918)) using both experimental and mathematical models

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Summary

Introduction

The most deadly influenza pandemic documented occurred in 1918–1919 with over 40 million deaths worldwide [1]. Present in most influenza A virus (IAV) isolates, including highly pathogenic avian strains [5], the newly discovered PB1-F2 protein is believed to have played a role in the extreme virulence of the 1918 pandemic [6]. Found during a search for CD8z T-cell epitopes, PB1-F2 is a small protein of 87–90 amino acids encoded by an alternate reading frame of the PB1 gene segment [7]. Expression levels of this protein are variable in cells, and it has been found localizing to mitochondria, it is present in the cytoplasm and the nucleus [7,8,9]. The PB1-F2 protein is recognized by the human immune system leading to both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses [7,11,12]

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