| Literature DB >> 19351406 |
Veljko Veljkovic1, Nevena Veljkovic, Claude P Muller, Sybille Müller, Sanja Glisic, Vladimir Perovic, Heinz Köhler.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epidemics caused by highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) are a continuing threat to human health and to the world's economy. The development of approaches, which help to understand the significance of structural changes resulting from the alarming mutational propensity for human-to-human transmission of HPAIV, is of particularly interest. Here we compare informational and structural properties of the hemagglutinin (HA) of H5N1 virus and human influenza virus subtypes, which are important for the receptor/virus interaction.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19351406 PMCID: PMC2679750 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6807-9-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Struct Biol ISSN: 1472-6807
Figure 1ISM analysis of HA1 proteins of H5 influenza viruses. (a) Consensus IS of HA1 of all H5N1 sequences in GenBank (n = 1407); (b) IS of H5N3 (A/swan/Hokkaido/51/96), the progenitor of H5N1, and (c) of the first isolated H5N1 virus (A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96); (d) consensus IS of H1N1 (n = 30), (e) of H3N2 (n = 30) and (f) of H7N7 (n = 30).
Figure 2The ISM analysis of HA1 proteins of H5N1 viruses isolated in Egypt in 2006/2007. (a) consensus IS of Egypt-1 and (b) of Egypt-2 strains, (c) IS of a representative Egypt-1 (A/teal/Egypt/9885-NAMRU3/2005) and (d) Egypt-2 virus (A/chicken/Egypt/R6/2007).
Figure 3Consensus IS of HA1 from three Spanish flu H1N1 viruses.
The electron- ion interaction potential (EIIP) of amino acids used to encode amino acids.
| Leu | 0.0000 |
| Ile | 0.0000 |
| Asn | 0.0036 |
| Gly | 0.0050 |
| Glu | 0.0057 |
| Val | 0.0058 |
| Pro | 0.0198 |
| His | 0.0242 |
| Lys | 0.0371 |
| Ala | 0.0373 |
| Tyr | 0.0516 |
| Trp | 0.0548 |
| Gln | 0.0761 |
| Met | 0.0823 |
| Ser | 0.0829 |
| Cys | 0.0829 |
| Thr | 0.0941 |
| Phe | 0.0946 |
| Arg | 0.0959 |
| Asp | 0.1263 |
The receptor recognition domains of HA proteins from H5N1, H1N1, H3N2 and H7N7 influenza viruses.
| A/Hong Kong/213/03 (H5N1) | F(0.076) | 42 – 75 | |
| A/New Caledonia/20/99 (H1N1) | F(0.236) | 262 – 295 | |
| A/New York/383/2004 (H3N2) | F(0.363) | 57 – 90 | |
| A/equine/Prague/56 (H7N7) | F(0.285) | 28 – 61 | |
| A/Egypt/0636-NAMRU3/2007(H5N1) | F(0.236) | 99 – 132 | |
| A/South Carolina/1/18 (H1N1)) | F(0.258) | 87 – 120 | |
Figure 4Overview of H5 HA trimer (PDB: 2ibx) and details of the VIN1 region. (a) Surface of HA trimer; each monomer has a different color. Carbohydrates are orange. The location of receptor binding domain (orange) and VIN1 region (yellow) are highlighted only for one monomer. (b) Ribbon representation of VIN1 region (yellow). Sulphur atoms involved in stabilization of the VIN1 region are shown as red spheres. Figures were generated by PyMol. (c) Secondary structure and amino acid composition of H5 HIN1 region. The consensus sequence of the VIN1 region is shown together with mutations found in 595 H5 HA sequences using BioEdit. Cystein residues are shown in red. (d) IS of the VIN1 region. Domains of H1N1, H3N2, H5N1, H7N1 and Spanish flu identified by consensus IS (Table 2) and their position in the 3D structure of HA1 and the IS of the peptide sequence. (e) A/New York/383/2004 (H3N2); (f) A/equine/Prague/56 (H7N7); (g) A/Egypt/0636-NAMRU3/2007(H5N1); (h) A/New Caledonia/20/99 (H1N1); (i) A/South Carolina/1/18 (H1N1).