Neutralizing epitopes of the H5 hemagglutinin from a virulent avian influenza virus and their relationship to pathogenicity.

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RESUMO

To define and characterize the major neutralizing epitopes of the H5 hemagglutinin, a panel of monoclonal antibodies specific for the H5 hemagglutinin of the virulent avian influenza virus A/Turkey/Ontario/7732/66 (H5N9) was prepared. Antibodies which neutralized infectivity of the virus were used to select a panel of escape mutants. Reactivity patterns of the panel of monoclonal antibodies against the panel of mutants by both enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay serology and hemagglutination inhibition operationally defined five distinct epitopes on the H5 molecule. The mutants were analyzed in vivo for virulence in chickens, and the findings indicate that viruses with mutations in four of five epitopes were no less virulent than the wild type, producing a rapidly fatal disease, while all viruses with mutations in the fifth epitope (group 1 mutants) were attenuated. These group 1 mutants were unaltered in the cleavage properties of the hemagglutinin, suggesting that the mechanism of attenuation is unrelated to processing of the hemagglutinin. One of the group 1 mutants, 77B1v, was characterized for its ability to produce necrosis of the spleen and was found to produce none of the lesions in the spleen which are characteristic of the wild-type virus, although virus was present in this organ. The results suggest an altered tissue tropism, perhaps sparing a population of cells critical to an effective immune response.

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