| Literature DB >> 31527796 |
Wei Ran1,2, Marco Gorka3, Kevin Ciminski1,2, Jinhwa Lee4, Ashley Malmlov5, Jan Schinköthe6, Miles Eckley5, Reyes A Murrieta5, Tawfik A Aboellail5, Corey L Campbell5, Gregory D Ebel5, Jingjiao Ma4, Anne Pohlmann3, Kati Franzke7, Reiner Ulrich6, Donata Hoffmann3, Adolfo García-Sastre8,9,10, Wenjun Ma11, Tony Schountz12, Martin Beer13, Martin Schwemmle14,15.
Abstract
Major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) molecules of multiple species function as cell-entry receptors for the haemagglutinin-like H18 protein of the bat H18N11 influenza A virus, enabling tropism of the viruses in a potentially broad range of vertebrates. However, the function of the neuraminidase-like N11 protein is unknown because it is dispensable for viral infection or the release of H18-pseudotyped viruses. Here, we show that infection of mammalian cells with wild-type H18N11 leads to the emergence of mutant viruses that lack the N11 ectodomain and acquired mutations in H18. An infectious clone of one such mutant virus, designated rP11, appeared to be genetically stable in mice and replicated to higher titres in mice and cell culture compared with wild-type H18N11. In ferrets, rP11 antigen and RNA were detected at low levels in various tissues, including the tonsils, whereas the wild-type virus was not. In Neotropical Jamaican fruit bats, wild-type H18N11 was found in intestinal Peyer's patches and was shed to high concentrations in rectal samples, resulting in viral transmission to naive contact bats. Notably, rP11 also replicated efficiently in bats; however, only restored full-length N11 viruses were transmissible. Our findings suggest that wild-type H18N11 replicates poorly in mice and ferrets and that N11 is a determinant for viral transmission in bats.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31527796 PMCID: PMC7758811 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-019-0556-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 17.745