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Revealing the Specificity of Human H1 Influenza A Viruses to Complex N -Glycans.

Angeles CanalesJavier SastreJosé María OrduñaCindy M SpruitJavier Pérez CastellsGema DomínguezKim M BouwmanRoosmarijn van der WoudeFrancisco Javier CañadaCorwin M NycholatJames C PaulsonGeert-Jan BoonsJiménez-Barbero JesúsRobert P de Vries
Published in: JACS Au (2023)
Influenza virus infection remains a threat to human health since viral hemagglutinins are constantly drifting, escaping infection and vaccine-induced antibody responses. Viral hemagglutinins from different viruses display variability in glycan recognition. In this context, recent H3N2 viruses have specificity for α2,6 sialylated branched N -glycans with at least three N -acetyllactosamine units (tri-LacNAc). In this work, we combined glycan arrays and tissue binding analyses with nuclear magnetic resonance experiments to characterize the glycan specificity of a family of H1 variants, including the one responsible for the 2009 pandemic outbreak. We also analyzed one engineered H6N1 mutant to understand if the preference for tri-LacNAc motifs could be a general trend in human-type receptor-adapted viruses. In addition, we developed a new NMR approach to perform competition experiments between glycans with similar compositions and different lengths. Our results point out that pandemic H1 viruses differ from previous seasonal H1 viruses by a strict preference for a minimum of di-LacNAc structural motifs.
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