Abstract

During antigenic drift in influenza viruses, changes in antigenicity are associated with changes in amino acid sequence of the large hemagglutinin polypeptide, HA1. In ten variants of Hong Kong (H3N2) influenza virus selected with monoclonal antibodies, the proline residue at position 143 in HA1 changed to serine, threonine, leucine or histidine. In other variants, asparagine 133 changed to lysine, glycine 144 to aspartic acid and serine 145 to lysine. All these changes are possible by single base changes in the RNA except the last, which requires a double base change. Residues 142 to 146 also changed in field strains of Hong Kong influenza isolated between 1968 and 1977 (Laver et al., 1980). The single amino acid sequence changes in HA1 of the monoclonal variants were detected by comparing the compositions of the soluble tryptic peptides from the variants with the known sequences of these peptides from wild-type virus. Two insoluble tryptic peptides, comprising residues 110 to 140 and 230 to 255 in the HA1 molecule, were not examined and we do not know if additional changes occurred in these regions. In order to determine whether sequential changes at the same position occurred during antigenic drift, antibody prepared against the new antigenic site on the variants in which proline 143 changed to histidine or threonine was used to select second generation variants of these variants. In the first case, the glycine residue (144) next to the histidine changed to aspartic acid, and in the second, the threonine residue at position 143 reverted to proline and the virus regained the antigenicity of wild-type. Although monoclonal antibodies revealed dramatic antigenic differences between the variants and wild-type virus, only those variants with changes at position 144 of glycine to aspartic acid or at position 145 of serine to lysine could be distinguished from wild-type virus using heterogeneous rabbit or ferret antisera. The other variants, including those which showed sequence changes in widely separated positions of HA1, could not be distinguished from wild-type with heterogeneous antisera. These findings suggest that sequence changes in the region comprising residues 142 to 146 of HA1 affect an important antigenic site on the hemagglutinin molecule, but how these changes affect the antigenic properties, or whether this region actually forms part of the antigenic site is not known.

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