Negative-Strand RNA Viruses

Shortening the unstructured, interdomain region of the non-structural protein NS1 of an avian H1N1 influenza virus increases its replication and pathogenicity in chickens

  • 1Equipe PIA, UMR1282 Infectiologie et Santé Publique, INRA, 37380 Nouzilly, France
  • 2UMR1282 Infectiologie et Santé Publique, Université François Rabelais de Tours, 37000 Tours, France
  • 3Equipe BioVA, UMR1282 Infectiologie et Santé Publique, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, 37380 Nouzilly, France
  • 4INRA UMR 703, APEX, Oniris-La Chantrerie, 44307 Nantes, France
  • 5LUNAM Université, École Nationale Vétérinaire, agro-alimentaire et de l’alimentation Nantes-Atlantique (Oniris), 44307 Nantes, France
  • 6Institut Pasteur, Unité de Génétique Moléculaire des Virus à ARN, Département de Virologie, 75015 Paris, France
  • 7CNRS, UMR3569, 75015 Paris, France
  • 8Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Unité de Génétique Moléculaire des Virus à ARN, EA302, 75015 Paris, France
  • Correspondence
    Daniel Marc daniel.marc{at}tours.inra.fr
  • Journal of General Virology 2014; 95(Pt 6):1233–1243 · https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.063776-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    Currently circulating H5N1 influenza viruses have undergone a complex evolution since the appearance of their progenitor A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96 in 1996. After the eradication of the H5N1 viruses that emerged in Hong Kong in 1997 (HK/97 viruses), new genotypes of H5N1 viruses emerged in the same region in 2000 that were more pathogenic for both chickens and mice than HK/97 viruses. These, as well as virtually all highly pathogenic H5N1 viruses since 2000, harbour a deletion of aa 80–84 in the unstructured region of the non-structural (NS) protein NS1 linking its RNA-binding domain to its effector domain. NS segments harbouring this mutation have since been found in non-H5N1 viruses and we asked whether this 5 aa deletion could have a general effect not limited to the NS1 of H5N1 viruses. We genetically engineered this deletion in the NS segment of a duck-origin avian H1N1 virus, and compared the in vivo and in vitro properties of the WT and NSdel8084 viruses. In experimentally infected chickens, the NSdel8084 virus showed both an increased replication potential and an increased pathogenicity. This in vivo phenotype was correlated with a higher replicative efficiency in vitro, both in embryonated eggs and in a chicken lung epithelial cell line. Our data demonstrated that the increased replicative potential conferred by this small deletion was a general feature not restricted to NS1 from H5N1 viruses and suggested that viruses acquiring this mutation may be selected positively in the future.

    • Supplementary material is available with the online version of this paper.