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The evolution of human influenza A viruses from 1999 to 2006 - a complete genome study

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  • The evolution of human influenza A viruses from 1999 to 2006 - a complete genome study

    Karoline Bragstad , Lars P Nielsen and Anders Fomsgaard
    Virology Journal 2008, 5:40doi:10.1186/1743-422X-5-40
    <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD><TR><TD>Published:</TD><TD>7 March 2008</TD></TR></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
    Abstract (provisional)


    Background

    Knowledge about the complete genome constellation of seasonal influenza A viruses from different countries is valuable for the monitoring and understanding of the evolution and migration of strains. Few complete genome sequences of influenza A viruses from Europe are publicly available at the present time and there have been few longitudinal genome studies of human influenza A viruses. We have studied the evolution of circulating human H3N2, H1N1 and H1N2 influenza A viruses from 1999 to 2006, we analysed 234 Danish human influenza A viruses and characterised 24 complete genomes.
    Results

    H3N2 was the prevalent strain in Denmark during the study period, but H1N1 dominated the 2000-2001 season. H1N2 viruses were first observed in Denmark in 2002-2003. After years of little genetic change in the H1N1 viruses the 2005-2006 season presented H1N1 of greater variability than before. This indicates that H1N1 viruses are evolving and that H1N1 soon is likely to be the prevalent strain again. Generally, the influenza A haemagglutinin (HA) of H3N2 viruses formed seasonal phylogenetic clusters. Different lineages co-circulating within the same season were also observed. The evolution has been stochastic, influenced by small jumps in genetic distance rather than constant drift, especially with the introduction of the Fujian-like viruses in 2002-2003. Also evolutionary stasis-periods were observed which might indicate well fit viruses. The evolution of H3N2 viruses have also been influenced by gene reassortments between lineages from different seasons. None of the influenza genes were influenced by strong positive selection pressure. The antigenic site B in H3N2 HA was the preferred site for genetic change during the study period probably because the site A has been masked by glycosylations. Substitutions at CTL-epitopes in the genes coding for the neuraminidase (NA), polymerase acidic protein (PA), matrix protein 1 (M1), non-structural protein 1 (NS1) and especially the nucleoprotein (NP) were observed. The N-linked glycosylation pattern varied during the study period and the H3N2 isolates from 2004 to 2006 were highly glycosylated with ten predicted sequons in HA, the highest amount of glycosylations observed in this study period.
    Conclusions

    The present study is the first to our knowledge to characterise the evolution of complete genomes of influenza A H3N2, H1N1 and H1N2 isolates from Europe over a time period of seven years from 1999 to 2006. More precise knowledge about the circulating strains may have implications for predicting the following season circulating viruses and thereby better matching the vaccine composition.


    The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.
    "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

  • #2
    Re: The evolution of human influenza A viruses from 1999 to 2006 - a complete genome study

    Bravo Denmark ! Thwarts Germany,France,Italy,UK,...
    What did they find out ?
    Under "conclusion" I read:
    "there is need...","it will be interesting..."

    what's with the "stasis" ? I haven't read it yet, but I doubt it.


    zero human genomes from Denmark available from the
    genbank-genome page
    76 human Danish sequences from the main search space for a maximum of 10 genomes,
    only PB2,HA,NA


    1: EU097769. Reports ...[gi:157011801] This record is not yet available.
    EU097769 is confidential: access denied


    edit: with "stasis" they must mean amino-acid changes rather than
    nucleotide changes. Especially in HA.


    here is an overview of the proportion of codon-3 changes,
    which usually don't induce amino-acid changes:



    viruses mainly from USA,New Sealand.
    High rate of non-synonymous changes in H3N2 since 1993
    and for H1N1 1986-1993 and before 1956.
    Low rate in H1N1 1994,1995,1999-2007.

    Why is it ? I have no idea yet.


    I'll keep editing this post...

    I think, it's pretty pointless to analyse those Danish sequences separately,
    ignoring US,NZ,AUS - sequences.
    While handling H1N1,H3N2,H1N2 in one paper - they are separate problems,IMO.

    I merged the 17 available Danish H3N2-PB2 sequences with my 793
    USA-PB2-H3N2 sequences from 1993-2007.
    They did fit into the list very well. If you delete the names, it's hard
    to tell which PB2 is from Denmark and which from USA.
    This was a bit different with the New Sealand sequences
    published last year.
    Seems to show that H3N2 wanders around the world, no oversummering
    in niches without replicating, very little (if any) oversummering
    in people through summer-infections. It's being re-introduced
    each season. Also, no big differences between US-sequences and
    European sequences. A bit more to Australian and NZ-sequences.
    As far as can be told from 17 Danish PB2s, more to come hopefully...

    Maybe I can make a picture later...

    mutations-list here:


    mutations-picture here:
    I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
    my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The evolution of human influenza A viruses from 1999 to 2006 - a complete genome study

      (bump)

      they should have done their extensive analysis (41 pages)
      with the available US,NZ,AUS sequences rather than restrict
      to the few Danish sequences !
      Why is it ? "Patriotism" ? Funding ?
      Release of sequences should be governed by EU-regulations,IMO.
      Just as protection-zones etc.
      I don't know about this research business.

      Unclear to me, what happened with the Fujian strain,
      how it developed, where it went.
      Many of the Fujian mutations became established.
      None of today's public viruses is close enough to be
      a direct successor of a public Fujian virus.
      Maybe a side-strain with a common origin ~2001.
      I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
      my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

      Comment

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