Title: Influenza: Coevolution Of Virus And Host
1Influenza Co-evolution Of Virus And Host
- Dr. Fofanovs Bioinformatics Lab
- U.H.
i
2Problem Description
- Influenza mutates and evolves rapidly
- Antigenic shift
- Antigenic drift
- Mutator mutations
- Influenza can be highly virulent
- 1918 Spanish flu (H1N1) 500,000 U.S. Deaths
- 1957 Asian flu (H2N2) 70,000 U.S. Deaths
- 1968 Hong Kong flu (H3N2) 34,000 U.S. Deaths
- 1977 Russian flu scare (H1N1) - limited mortality
- 1997 avian flu scare (H5N1) - limited mortality
- Potential for future pandemics is high
- Analysis of influenza evolution may aid design
and development of DNA/RNA-based diagnostics
http//www.hhs.gov/nvpo/pandemics/flu3.htm
3Current State Of The Art
- CDC recognized diagnostics
- Slower, traditional laboratory culturing methods
(e.G., Incubation within embryonic chick eggs) - Faster, Immunilogical diagnostics
- Faster return than laboratory methods, less
accurate and specific than DNA/RNA-based
technology - PCR/Microarray diagnostics
- Can be both fast and inexpensive
- Requires careful design of primers/probes
- Specificity/accuracy degraded by rapid
mutation/evolution of target genome
4Segment Protein Assignment
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5Influenza Virus Graphic - Proteins
http//www.influenzareport.com/ir/virol.htm
6Protein List
- Polymerase B2 protein (PB2)
- Polymerase B1 protein (PB1)
- Polymerase A protein (PA)
- Haemagglutinin (HA or H)
- Nucleocapsid protein (NP)
- Neuraminidase (NA or N)
- Matrix protein (M) M1 constructs the matrix And
in influenza A viruses, only, M2 acts as an ion
channel pump to lower or maintain the ph of the
endosome - Non-structural protein (NS) The function of NS2
is hypothetical (other sources -gt facilitates
nuclear export)
http//www.influenzareport.com/ir/virol.htm
(This Slide And Following 5)
7Haemagglutinin
- A glycoprotein containing either 2 of 3
glycosylation sites, with a molecular weight of
approximately 76,000 - Spans the lipid membrane so that the major part,
which contains at least 5 antigenic domains
presented at the outer surface - Serves as a receptor by binding to sialic acid
(N-acetyl-neuraminic acid) and induces
penetration of the interior of the virus particle
by membrane fusion - The main influenza virus antigen the antigenic
sites being A, B (carrying the receptor binding
site), C, D, and E - Body of the HA molecule contains the stalk region
and the fusiogenic domain, which is needed for
membrane fusion when the virus infects a new cell - At low pH, the fusion peptide is turned to an
interior position - Forms trimers and several trimers form a fusion
pore
8Neuraminidase
- A glycoprotein found as projections on the
surface of the virus - Forms a tetrameric structure with an average
molecular weight of 220,000 - Presents its main part at the outer surface of
the cell, spans the lipid layer, and has a small
cytoplasmic tail - Acts as an enzyme, cleaving sialic acid from the
HA molecule, from other NA molecules and from
glycoproteins and glycolipids at the cell surface - Serves as an important antigenic site, and in
addition, seems to be necessary for the
penetration of the virus through the mucin layer
of the respiratory epithelium
9M2 Protein
- Virus particle, taken up in the endosome,
activity of the M2 ion channel is increased so
that ions flood into the particle, inducing a low
pH - As a result, the HA-M1 linkage is disturbed, the
particle opens, the fusion peptide within the HA
is translocated, and the HA fuses with the inner
layer of the endosome membrane - Ribonucleoproteins are liberated into the
cytoplasm of the cell and transported to the
nucleus, where the complex is disrupted, and
viral RNA synthesis is initiated - Inhibited by amantadine, rimantadine and related
substances
10NS1
- Molecular weight of 26,000
- Forms a dimer that inhibits the export of poly-A
containing mRNA molecules from the nucleus, thus
giving preference to viral RNA which is
transported to the ribosome and translated - Might also inhibit splicing of pre-mRNA
- Probably able to suppress the interferon response
in the virus-infected cell leading to unimpaired
virus production
11NS2
- A small molecule with a molecular weight of
11,000 - Might be bound to M1 protein
- Function is believed to facilitate the transport
of newly synthesised RNPs from the nucleus to the
cytoplasm to accelerate virus production
12Preliminary Results - Measures
- To Detect Presence Of And Estimate The Rate Of
Influenza-Host Co-Evolution, A Measure Is
Required - MMn MMn Sequences
- Total nMer
Count - Quality MM1MM2MM3MM4
- of Signature nMerSize
- Where MMn Number Of Sequences n Mismatches Away
- From Host
13Preliminary Results - Mismatches
- A mismatch sequence is
- Any clade of sequences of nMer length (16-21) not
found in host, even when n nucleotides are
changed to all possible nucleotide combinations - For example, the sequence ATAGC is said to be 1MM
away from host, if - TTAGC, GTAGC, CTAGC are also not found in host
- AAAGC, AGAGC, ACAGC are also not found in host
- ATTGC, ATGGC, ATCGC are also not found in host
- Etc.
14Preliminary Results Method Of Comparison
- Average quality of signature
- By type (A only)
- By segment (1-8)
- By host (avian, human, others)
- By sero-type
- By time
- By locale (pending)
- Repeat with sequences blind to non-human host
genomes - Chicken
- Pig (pending availability of genome sequence)
15Segment 1 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
16Segment 2 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
17Segment 3 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
18Segment 4 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
19Segment 5 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
20Segment 6 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
21Segment 7 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
22Segment 8 16mers - Mean/Std. Dev.
Human Blind Analysis Chicken Blind
Analysis
23Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
24Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
25Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
26Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
27Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
28Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
29Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
30Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
31Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
32Segment 1 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
33Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
34Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
35Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
36Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
37Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
38Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
39Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
40Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
41Segment 2 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
42Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
43Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
44Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
45Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
46Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
47Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
48Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
49Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
50Segment 3 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
51Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
52Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
53Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
54Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
55Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
56Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
57Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
58Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
59Segment 4 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
60Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
61Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
62Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
63Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
64Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
65Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
66Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
67Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
68Segment 5 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
69Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
70Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
71Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
72Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
73Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
74Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
75Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
76Segment 6 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
77Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
78Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
79Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
80Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
81Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
82Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
83Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
84Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
85Segment 7 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
86Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
87Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
88Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
89Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
90Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
91Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
92Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
93Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
94Segment 8 Human-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
95Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
96Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
97Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
98Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
99Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
100Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
101Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
102Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
103Segment 1 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
104Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
105Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
106Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
107Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
108Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
109Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
110Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
111Segment 2 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
112Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
113Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
114Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
115Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
116Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
117Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
118Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
119Segment 3 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
120Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
121Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
122Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
123Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
124Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
125Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
126Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
127Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
128Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
129Segment 4 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
130Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
131Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
132Segment 5 Chicken -Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
133Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
134Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
135Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
136Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
137Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
138Segment 5 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
139Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
140Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
141Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
142Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
143Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
144Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
145Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
146Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
147Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
148Segment 6 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
149Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
150Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
151Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
152Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
153Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
154Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
155Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
156Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
157Segment 7 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
158Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers All Hosts And
Sero-Types
159Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers Avian Host And
Sero-Types
160Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers Human Host And
Sero-Types
161Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers Other Hosts And
Other Host Sero-Types
162Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Host
163Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers H5N1 By Host
164Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers H9N2 By Host
165Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Host
166Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers H3N2 By Year Of
Isolation
167Segment 8 Chicken-Blind 16mers H1N1 By Year Of
Isolation
168Research Plan
- Analysis using sequence distant from other hosts
(preliminary data are human-blind) - Avian-blind
- Swine-blind
- Mouse-blind