Ministry of Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia [143001], COST Action [B28]

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Ministry of Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia [143001], COST Action [B28]

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Publications

Identification of hemagglutinin structural domain and polymorphisms which may modulate swine H1N1 interactions with human receptor

Veljković, Veljko; Niman, Henry L.; Glišić, Sanja; Veljković, Nevena V.; Perović, Vladimir R.; Muller, Claude P.

(2009)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Veljković, Veljko
AU  - Niman, Henry L.
AU  - Glišić, Sanja
AU  - Veljković, Nevena V.
AU  - Perović, Vladimir R.
AU  - Muller, Claude P.
PY  - 2009
UR  - https://vinar.vin.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3801
AB  - Background: The novel A/H1N1 influenza virus, which recently emerged in North America is most closely related to North American H1N1/N2 swine viruses. Until the beginning of 2009, North American swine H1N1/N2 viruses have only sporadically infected humans as dead-end hosts. In 2009 the A/H1N1 virus acquired the capacity to spread efficiently by human to human transmission. The novel A/H1N1 influenza virus has struck thousands of people in more than 70 countries and killed more than 140, representing a public health emergency of international concern. Here we have studied properties of hemagglutinin of A/H1N1 which may modulate virus/receptor interaction. Results: Analyses by ISM bioinformatics platform of the HA1 protein of North American swine H1N1/N2 viruses and the new A/H1N1 showed that both groups of viruses differed in conserved characteristics that reflect a distinct propensity of these viruses to undergo a specific interaction with swine or human host proteins or receptors. Swine H1N1/N2 viruses that sporadically infected humans featured both the swine and the human interaction pattern. Substitutions F71S, T128S, E302K, M314L in HA1 of swine H1N1 viruses from North America are identified as critical for the human interaction pattern of A/H1N1 and residues D94, D196 and D274 are predicted to be hotspots for polymorphisms which could increase infectivity of A/H1N1 virus. At least one of these residues has already emerged in the A/H1N1 isolates from Spain, Italy and USA. The domain 286-326 was identified to be involved in virus/receptor interaction. Conclusion: Our results (i) contribute to better understanding of the origin of the novel A/H1N1 influenza virus, (ii) provide a tool for monitoring its molecular evolution (iii) predicts hotspots associated with enhanced infectivity in humans and (iv) identify therapeutic and diagnostic targets for prevention and treatment of A/H1N1 infection.
T2  - BMC Structural Biology
T1  - Identification of hemagglutinin structural domain and polymorphisms which may modulate swine H1N1 interactions with human receptor
VL  - 9
DO  - 10.1186/1472-6807-9-62
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Veljković, Veljko and Niman, Henry L. and Glišić, Sanja and Veljković, Nevena V. and Perović, Vladimir R. and Muller, Claude P.",
year = "2009",
abstract = "Background: The novel A/H1N1 influenza virus, which recently emerged in North America is most closely related to North American H1N1/N2 swine viruses. Until the beginning of 2009, North American swine H1N1/N2 viruses have only sporadically infected humans as dead-end hosts. In 2009 the A/H1N1 virus acquired the capacity to spread efficiently by human to human transmission. The novel A/H1N1 influenza virus has struck thousands of people in more than 70 countries and killed more than 140, representing a public health emergency of international concern. Here we have studied properties of hemagglutinin of A/H1N1 which may modulate virus/receptor interaction. Results: Analyses by ISM bioinformatics platform of the HA1 protein of North American swine H1N1/N2 viruses and the new A/H1N1 showed that both groups of viruses differed in conserved characteristics that reflect a distinct propensity of these viruses to undergo a specific interaction with swine or human host proteins or receptors. Swine H1N1/N2 viruses that sporadically infected humans featured both the swine and the human interaction pattern. Substitutions F71S, T128S, E302K, M314L in HA1 of swine H1N1 viruses from North America are identified as critical for the human interaction pattern of A/H1N1 and residues D94, D196 and D274 are predicted to be hotspots for polymorphisms which could increase infectivity of A/H1N1 virus. At least one of these residues has already emerged in the A/H1N1 isolates from Spain, Italy and USA. The domain 286-326 was identified to be involved in virus/receptor interaction. Conclusion: Our results (i) contribute to better understanding of the origin of the novel A/H1N1 influenza virus, (ii) provide a tool for monitoring its molecular evolution (iii) predicts hotspots associated with enhanced infectivity in humans and (iv) identify therapeutic and diagnostic targets for prevention and treatment of A/H1N1 infection.",
journal = "BMC Structural Biology",
title = "Identification of hemagglutinin structural domain and polymorphisms which may modulate swine H1N1 interactions with human receptor",
volume = "9",
doi = "10.1186/1472-6807-9-62"
}
Veljković, V., Niman, H. L., Glišić, S., Veljković, N. V., Perović, V. R.,& Muller, C. P.. (2009). Identification of hemagglutinin structural domain and polymorphisms which may modulate swine H1N1 interactions with human receptor. in BMC Structural Biology, 9.
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-9-62
Veljković V, Niman HL, Glišić S, Veljković NV, Perović VR, Muller CP. Identification of hemagglutinin structural domain and polymorphisms which may modulate swine H1N1 interactions with human receptor. in BMC Structural Biology. 2009;9.
doi:10.1186/1472-6807-9-62 .
Veljković, Veljko, Niman, Henry L., Glišić, Sanja, Veljković, Nevena V., Perović, Vladimir R., Muller, Claude P., "Identification of hemagglutinin structural domain and polymorphisms which may modulate swine H1N1 interactions with human receptor" in BMC Structural Biology, 9 (2009),
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6807-9-62 . .
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