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J Virol . Identification of a permissive secondary mutation that restores the enzymatic activity of oseltamivir resistance mutation H275Y

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  • J Virol . Identification of a permissive secondary mutation that restores the enzymatic activity of oseltamivir resistance mutation H275Y


    J Virol


    . 2022 Jan 19;jvi0198221.
    doi: 10.1128/jvi.01982-21. Online ahead of print.
    Identification of a permissive secondary mutation that restores the enzymatic activity of oseltamivir resistance mutation H275Y


    Li Jiang 1 , Neha Samant 1 , Ping Liu 2 , Mohan Somasundaran 2 , Jeffrey D Jensen 3 , Wayne A Marasco 4 , Timothy F Kowalik 5 , Celia A Schiffer 1 , Robert W Finberg 2 , Jennifer P Wang 2 , Daniel N A Bolon 1



    Affiliations

    Abstract

    Many oseltamivir resistance mutations exhibit fitness defects in the absence of drug pressure that hinders their propagation in hosts. Secondary permissive mutations can rescue fitness defects and facilitate the segregation of resistance mutations in viral populations. Previous studies have identified a panel of permissive or compensatory mutations in neuraminidase (NA) that restore the growth defect of the predominant oseltamivir resistance mutation (H275Y) in H1N1 influenza A. In prior work, we identified a hyperactive mutation (Y276F) that increased NA activity by approximately 70%. While Y276F had not been previously identified as a permissive mutation, we hypothesized that Y276F may counteract the defects caused by H275Y by buffering its reduced NA expression and enzyme activity. In this study we measured the relative fitness, NA activity, and surface expression, as well as sensitivity to oseltamivir, for several oseltamivir resistance mutations including H275Y in the wildtype or Y276F genetic background. Our results demonstrate that Y276F selectively rescues the fitness defect of H275Y by restoring its NA surface expression and enzymatic activity, elucidating the local compensatory structural impacts of Y276F on the adjacent H275Y. Importance The potential for influenza A virus (IAV) to cause pandemics makes understanding evolutionary mechanisms that impact drug resistance critical for developing surveillance and treatment strategies. Oseltamivir is the most widely used therapeutic strategy to treat IAV infections, but mutations in IAV can lead to drug resistance. The main oseltamivir resistance mutation, H275Y, occurs in the neuraminidase (NA) protein of IAV and reduces drug binding as well as NA function. Here, we identify a new helper mutation, Y276F that can rescue the functional defects of H275Y and contribute to the evolution of drug resistance in IAV.


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