4.6 Article

The Species-Specific 282 Residue in the PB2 Subunit of the Polymerase Regulates RNA Synthesis and Replication of Influenza A Viruses Infecting Bat and Nonbat Hosts

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JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
卷 96, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.02190-21

关键词

bat influenza A virus; host adaptation; RNA-dependent RNA polymerase; ribonucleoprotein complex

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资金

  1. DBT, Ramalingaswami reentry fellowship [BT/RLF/Reentry/02/2015]
  2. SERB, Early Career Research Award [ECR/2017/001896]
  3. MHRD
  4. Scheme for Transformational and Advanced Research in Science [STARS/APR2019/BS/369/FS, 369]
  5. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Government of India [09/081 [1301]/2017-EMR-I, 09/081 [1316]/2017-EMR-I, 09/081 [1405]/2020-EMR-I]

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In this study, the researchers compared the RNA polymerases of bat influenza viruses and classical influenza A viruses (IAVs) and identified differential amino acid preferences in the PB2 subunit. They found that the PB2-282 residue, which is serine in bat viruses and glutamic acid in classical IAVs, affects the polymerase activity and replication efficiency of the virus in different host species. The results suggest that this residue may serve as a restriction element of the bat virus polymerase, limiting its activity in nonbat host species.
Bat influenza viruses are genetically distant from classical influenza A viruses (IAVs) and show distinct functional differences in their surface antigens. Nevertheless, any comparative analyses between bat and classical IAV RNA polymerases or their specific subunits are yet to be performed. In this work, we have identified signature residues present in the bat influenza virus polymerase which are responsible for its altered fitness in comparison to the classical IAVs. Through comparative sequence and structural analysis, we have identified specific positions in the PB2 subunit of the polymerase, with differential amino acid preferences among bat and nonbat IAVs. Functional screening helped us to focus upon the previously uncharacterized PB2-282 residue, which is serine in bat virus but harbors highly conserved glutamic acid in classical IAVs. Introduction of E282S mutation in the human-adapted PB2 (influenza A/H1N1/WSN/1933) drastically reduces polymerase activity and replication efficiency of the virus in human, bat, and canine cells. Interestingly, this newly identified PB2-282 residue within an evolutionary conserved S-E-S motif, present across different genera of influenza viruses and serving as a key regulator of RNA synthesis activity of the polymerase. In contrast, bat influenza viruses harbor an atypical S-S-T motif at the same position of PB2, alteration of which with the human-like S-E-T motif significantly enhances its (H17N10/Guatemala/164/2009) polymerase activity in human cells. Together, our data indicate that the PB2-S282 residue may serve as an inherent restriction element of the bat virus polymerase, limiting its activity in other host species. IMPORTANCE Influenza A viruses are known for their ability to perform cross-species transmission, facilitated by amino acid alterations either in the surface antigen hemagglutinin (HA) or in the polymerase subunit PB2. Recent isolation of influenza A-like viruses from bats raised concern about their epizootic and zoonotic potential. Here, we identify a novel species-specific signature present within the influenza virus polymerase that may serve as a key factor in adaptation of influenza viruses from bat to nonbat host species. The PB2-282 residue, which harbors a highly conserved glutamic acid for influenza viruses across all genera (A, B, C, and D), encompasses an atypical serine in the case of bat influenza viruses. Our data show that the human-adapted polymerase, harboring a bat-specific signature (PB2-S282,) performs poorly, while bat PB2 protein, harboring a human-specific signature (PB2-E282), shows increased fitness in human cells. Influenza A viruses are known for their ability to perform cross-species transmission, facilitated by amino acid alterations either in the surface antigen hemagglutinin (HA) or in the polymerase subunit PB2. Recent isolation of influenza A-like viruses from bats raised concern about their epizootic and zoonotic potential.

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