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Influenza - NS1 contributes little to the virulence of H5N1 viruses

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  • Influenza - NS1 contributes little to the virulence of H5N1 viruses

    Press release Rober Koch Institute (German)

    J Virol. 2010 Oct;84(20):10708-18. Epub 2010 Aug 4.

    Virulence determinants of avian H5N1 influenza A virus in mammalian and avian hosts: role of the C-terminal ESEV motif in the viral NS1 protein.

    Abstract

    We assessed the prediction that access of the viral NS1 protein to cellular PDZ domain protein networks enhances the virulence of highly pathogenic avian influenza A viruses.

    The NS1 proteins of most avian influenza viruses bear the C-terminal ligand sequence Glu-Ser-Glu-Val (ESEV) for PDZ domains present in multiple host proteins, whereas no such motif is found in the NS1 homologues of seasonal human virus strains.

    Previous analysis showed that a C-terminal ESEV motif increases viral virulence when introduced into the NS1 protein of mouse-adapted H1N1 influenza virus.

    To examine the role of the PDZ domain ligand motif in avian influenza virus virulence, we generated three recombinants, derived from the prototypic H5N1 influenza A/Vietnam/1203/04 virus, expressing NS1 proteins that either have the C-terminal ESEV motif or the human influenza virus RSKV consensus or bear a natural truncation of this motif, respectively.

    Cell biological analyses showed strong control of NS1 nuclear migration in infected mammalian and avian cells, with only minor differences between the three variants.

    The ESEV sequence attenuated viral replication on cultured human, murine, and duck cells but not on chicken fibroblasts. However, all three viruses caused highly lethal infections in mice and chickens, with little difference in viral titers in organs, mean lethal dose, or intravenous pathogenicity index.

    These findings demonstrate that a PDZ domain ligand sequence in NS1 contributes little to the virulence of H5N1 viruses in these hosts, and they indicate that this motif modulates viral replication in a strain- and host-dependent manner.
    Last edited by Gert van der Hoek; September 30, 2010, 06:09 AM. Reason: edited bolding

  • #2
    Re: Influenza - NS1 contributes little to the virulence of H5N1 viruses

    I notice they didn't test it in pigs, as done in a prior study where the conclusion was it did increase virulence. see:

    The NS1 gene of H5N1 influenza viruses circumvents the host anti-viral cytokine responses.

    .
    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

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    • #3
      Re: Influenza - NS1 contributes little to the virulence of H5N1 viruses

      Excerpt from the RKI press release (machinetranslated):

      When avian influenza virus contains a specific protein, NS1, a portion of the access to the important cellular "PDZ-driven" signaling networks possible. The NS1 proteins of human pathogenic strains (for people circulate and make them sick), have lost this ability, however.

      Florian target Ecki and colleagues developed and compared, therefore, H5N1 viruses that only in the PDZ-recognition motif differed.

      They found no significant variations between the differences in virulence, ie the ability to cause disease. The ability to influence of interferons (proteins with antiviral effect), [whcih] is the important feature of the NS1 protein, the PDZ-recognition motif has not been significantly affected.

      "Contrary to what the experts previously believed, this study shows that we, at least for this PDZ-recognition motif we do not have to worry," said virologist Thorsten Wolff, the RKI Head of the Department of influenza and co-author of the publication.

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