Role of hemagglutinin cleavage for the pathogenicity of influenza virus

被引:568
作者
Steinhauer, DA [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Inst Med Res, London NW7 1AA, England
关键词
D O I
10.1006/viro.1999.9716
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Although human epidemics of influenza occur on nearly an annual basis and result in a significant number of "excess deaths," the viruses responsible are not generally considered highly pathogenic. On occasion, however, an outbreak occurs that demonstrates the potential lethality of influenza viruses. The human pandemic of 1918 spread worldwide and killed millions, and the limited human outbreak of highly pathogenic avian viruses in Hong Kong at the end of 1997 is a warning that this could happen again. In avian species such as chickens and turkeys, several outbreaks of highly pathogenic influenza viruses have been documented. Although the reason for the lethality of the human 1918 viruses remains unclear, the pathogenicity of the avian viruses, including those that caused the human 1997 outbreak, relates primarily to properties of the hemagglutinin glycoprotein (HA). Cleavage of the HA precursor molecule HA, is required to activate virus infectivity, and the distribution of activating proteases in the host is one of the determinants of tropism and, as such, pathogenicity. The HAs of mammalian and nonpathogenic avian viruses are cleaved extracellularly, which limits their spread in hosts to tissues where the appropriate proteases are encountered. On the other hand, the HAs of pathogenic viruses are cleaved intracellularly by ubiquitously occurring proteases and therefore have the capacity to infect various cell types and cause systemic infections. The x-ray crystal structure of HA, has been solved recently and shows that the cleavage site forms a loop that extends from the surface of the molecule, and it is the composition and structure of the cleavage loop region that dictate the range of proteases that can potentially activate infectivity, Here influenza virus pathogenicity is discussed, with an emphasis on the role of HA, cleavage as a determining factor. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 20
页数:20
相关论文
共 240 条
[41]  
Desselberger U, 1997, ARCH VIROL, P131
[42]  
ECKROADE R J., 1987, Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Avian Influenza, 3-5 September, 1986 pp, P22
[43]   Binding of the influenza A virus to cell-surface receptors: Structures of five hemagglutinin-sialyloligosaccharide complexes determined by x-ray crystallography [J].
Eisen, MB ;
Sabesan, S ;
Skehel, JJ ;
Wiley, DC .
VIROLOGY, 1997, 232 (01) :19-31
[44]   THE PATHOGENICITY OF AN AVIAN INFLUENZA-VIRUS ISOLATED IN VICTORIA [J].
FORMAN, AJ ;
PARSONSON, IM ;
DOUGHTY, WJ .
AUSTRALIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL, 1986, 63 (09) :294-296
[45]   COMBINED INFECTION OF MICE WITH H-INFLUENZAE AND INFLUENZA VIRUS BY THE INTRANASAL ROUTE [J].
FRANCIS, T ;
DETORREGROSA, MV .
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 1945, 76 (01) :70-77
[46]   A study of the neurotropic tendency in strains of the virus of epidemic influenza [J].
Francis, T ;
Moore, A .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 1940, 72 (06) :717-728
[47]   Heterogeneity in the haemagglutinin gene and emergence of the highly pathogenic phenotype among recent H5N2 avian influenza viruses from Mexico [J].
Garcia, M ;
Crawford, JM ;
Latimer, JW ;
RiveraCruz, E ;
Perdue, ML .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY, 1996, 77 :1493-1504
[48]   FRAME SHIFT MUTATIONS AS A NOVEL MECHANISM FOR THE GENERATION OF NEUTRALIZATION RESISTANT MUTANTS OF HUMAN RESPIRATORY SYNCYTIAL VIRUS [J].
GARCIABARRENO, B ;
PORTELA, A ;
DELGADO, T ;
LOPEZ, JA ;
MELERO, JA .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1990, 9 (12) :4181-4187
[49]   PROTEOLYTIC ACTIVATION OF THE INFLUENZA-VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ - THE STRUCTURE OF THE CLEAVAGE SITE AND THE ENZYMES INVOLVED IN CLEAVAGE [J].
GARTEN, W ;
BOSCH, FX ;
LINDER, D ;
ROTT, R ;
KLENK, HD .
VIROLOGY, 1981, 115 (02) :361-374
[50]   INHIBITION OF PROTEOLYTIC ACTIVATION OF INFLUENZA-VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ BY SPECIFIC PEPTIDYL CHLOROALKYL KETONES [J].
GARTEN, W ;
STIENEKE, A ;
SHAW, E ;
WIKSTROM, P ;
KLENK, HD .
VIROLOGY, 1989, 172 (01) :25-31