Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins

Controlling influenza A virus (IAV) infections remains a challenge largely due to the high replication and mutation rates of the virus. IAV is a negative-sense RNA virus with two main surface proteins — hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). HA recognizes and binds sialic acid on host cell recep...

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Main Author: Canale, Aneth S.
Format: Others
Published: eScholarship@UMMS 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/948
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1954&context=gsbs_diss
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spelling ndltd-umassmed.edu-oai-escholarship.umassmed.edu-gsbs_diss-19542021-09-14T17:23:37Z Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins Canale, Aneth S. Controlling influenza A virus (IAV) infections remains a challenge largely due to the high replication and mutation rates of the virus. IAV is a negative-sense RNA virus with two main surface proteins — hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). HA recognizes and binds sialic acid on host cell receptors to initiate virus entry. NA also recognizes sialic acid on host cell receptors but functions by cleaving sialic acid interactions to release progeny virus. Because both HA and NA interact with sialic acid on the host cell surface with opposing effects, their balance is essential for optimal viral infectivity. However, the evolutionary constraints that maintain HA and NA function, while conserving a functional balance, are not fully understood. I adapted the comprehensive and systematic mutational scanning technology, termed EMPIRIC (Exceedingly Meticulous and Parallel Investigation of Randomized Individual Codons), to investigate the local fitness landscape of regions of HA under standard conditions and under drug pressure. We observed that synonymous substitutions had a higher mean absolute fitness effect in the signal than a neighboring HA region used as a control. Folding ∆G calculations revealed a hairpin loop that appeared to be differentially enriched between human and swine IAV variants in sequences of circulating strains. However, the molecular mechanism resulting in the observed host species-specific constraints remains undefined. Studying the fitness landscape of the receptor binding site of HA revealed the high sensitivity of this region to mutation. However, modulating the levels of NA activity by mutation and by using the NA inhibitor oseltamivir enabled the identification of HA mutations with adaptive potential under selection pressure by oseltamivir. These results highlight the importance of the HA-NA functional balance virus replication and in the development of resistance to oseltamivir inhibitors. These studies provide improved understanding of IAV biology, and can inform the development of improved antiviral agents with reduced likelihood for resistance. 2017-12-18T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/948 https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1954&context=gsbs_diss Licensed under a Creative Commons license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ GSBS Dissertations and Theses eScholarship@UMMS Molecular evolution deep mutational scanning hemagglutinin influenza fitness Biochemistry Biophysics Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Structural Biology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Molecular evolution
deep mutational scanning
hemagglutinin
influenza
fitness
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Structural Biology
spellingShingle Molecular evolution
deep mutational scanning
hemagglutinin
influenza
fitness
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Structural Biology
Canale, Aneth S.
Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins
description Controlling influenza A virus (IAV) infections remains a challenge largely due to the high replication and mutation rates of the virus. IAV is a negative-sense RNA virus with two main surface proteins — hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). HA recognizes and binds sialic acid on host cell receptors to initiate virus entry. NA also recognizes sialic acid on host cell receptors but functions by cleaving sialic acid interactions to release progeny virus. Because both HA and NA interact with sialic acid on the host cell surface with opposing effects, their balance is essential for optimal viral infectivity. However, the evolutionary constraints that maintain HA and NA function, while conserving a functional balance, are not fully understood. I adapted the comprehensive and systematic mutational scanning technology, termed EMPIRIC (Exceedingly Meticulous and Parallel Investigation of Randomized Individual Codons), to investigate the local fitness landscape of regions of HA under standard conditions and under drug pressure. We observed that synonymous substitutions had a higher mean absolute fitness effect in the signal than a neighboring HA region used as a control. Folding ∆G calculations revealed a hairpin loop that appeared to be differentially enriched between human and swine IAV variants in sequences of circulating strains. However, the molecular mechanism resulting in the observed host species-specific constraints remains undefined. Studying the fitness landscape of the receptor binding site of HA revealed the high sensitivity of this region to mutation. However, modulating the levels of NA activity by mutation and by using the NA inhibitor oseltamivir enabled the identification of HA mutations with adaptive potential under selection pressure by oseltamivir. These results highlight the importance of the HA-NA functional balance virus replication and in the development of resistance to oseltamivir inhibitors. These studies provide improved understanding of IAV biology, and can inform the development of improved antiviral agents with reduced likelihood for resistance.
author Canale, Aneth S.
author_facet Canale, Aneth S.
author_sort Canale, Aneth S.
title Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins
title_short Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins
title_full Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins
title_fullStr Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins
title_full_unstemmed Adapting the EMPIRIC Approach to Investigate Evolutionary Constraints in Influenza A Virus Surface Proteins
title_sort adapting the empiric approach to investigate evolutionary constraints in influenza a virus surface proteins
publisher eScholarship@UMMS
publishDate 2017
url https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/948
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1954&context=gsbs_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT canaleaneths adaptingtheempiricapproachtoinvestigateevolutionaryconstraintsininfluenzaavirussurfaceproteins
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