Hemagglutinin (influenza)

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Hemagglutinin
File:PDB 1hgd EBI.jpg
Identifiers
Symbol Hemagglutinin
Pfam PF00509
InterPro IPR001364
SCOP 1hgd
SUPERFAMILY 1hgd
Influenza C hemagglutinin stalk
File:PDB 1flc EBI.jpg
x-ray structure of the haemagglutinin-esterase-fusion glycoprotein of influenza c virus
Identifiers
Symbol Hema_stalk
Pfam PF08720
InterPro IPR014831
SCOP 1flc
SUPERFAMILY 1flc

Influenza hemagglutinin (HA) or haemagglutinin (British English) is a glycoprotein found on the surface of influenza viruses. It is responsible for binding the virus to cells with sialic acid on the membranes, such as cells in the upper respiratory tract or erythrocytes.[1] It is also responsible for the fusion of the viral envelope with the endosome membrane, after the pH has been reduced. The name "hemagglutinin" comes from the protein's ability to cause red blood cells (erythrocytes) to clump together ("agglutinate") in vitro.[2]

Subtypes

Structure of influenza, showing neuraminidase marked as NA and hemagglutinin as HA.

HA has at least 18 different antigens. These subtypes are named H1 through H18. H16 was discovered in 2004 on influenza A viruses isolated from black-headed gulls from Sweden and Norway. H17 was discovered in 2012 in fruit bats.[3][4] Most recently, H18 was discovered in a Peruvian bat in 2013.[5] The first three hemagglutinins, H1, H2, and H3, are found in human influenza viruses.

Viral neuraminidase (NA) is another protein found on the surface of influenza. Influenza viruses are characterized by the type of HA and NA that they carry; hence H1N1, H5N2 etc.

A highly pathogenic avian flu virus of H5N1 type has been found to infect humans at a low rate. It has been reported that single amino acid changes in this avian virus strain's type H5 hemagglutinin have been found in human patients that "can significantly alter receptor specificity of avian H5N1 viruses, providing them with an ability to bind to receptors optimal for human influenza viruses".[6][7] This finding seems to explain how an H5N1 virus that normally does not infect humans can mutate and become able to efficiently infect human cells. The hemagglutinin of the H5N1 virus has been associated with the high pathogenicity of this flu virus strain, apparently due to its ease of conversion to an active form by proteolysis.[8][9]

Function and mechanism

HA has two functions. Firstly, it allows the recognition of target vertebrate cells, accomplished through the binding to these cells' sialic acid-containing receptors. Secondly, once bound it facilitates the entry of the viral genome into the target cells by causing the fusion of host endosomal membrane with the viral membrane.[10]

HA binds to the monosaccharide sialic acid which is present on the surface of its target cells, which causes the viral particles to stick to the cell's surface. The cell membrane then engulfs the virus and the portion of the membrane that encloses it pinches off to form a new membrane-bound compartment within the cell called an endosome, which contains the engulfed virus. The cell then attempts to begin digesting the contents of the endosome by acidifying its interior and transforming it into a lysosome. However, as soon as the pH within the endosome drops to about 6.0, the original folded structure of the HA molecule becomes unstable, causing it to partially unfold and release a very hydrophobic portion of its peptide chain that was previously hidden within the protein.[11]

This so-called "fusion peptide" acts like a molecular grappling hook by inserting itself into the endosomal membrane and locking on. Then, when the rest of the HA molecule refolds into a new structure (which is more stable at the lower pH), it "retracts the grappling hook" and pulls the endosomal membrane right up next to the virus particle's own membrane, causing the two to fuse together. Once this has happened, the contents of the virus, including its RNA genome, are free to pour out into the cell's cytoplasm.[citation needed]

Structure

HA is a homotrimeric integral membrane glycoprotein. It is shaped like a cylinder, and is approximately 13.5 nanometres long. The three identical monomers that constitute HA are constructed into a central α helix coil; three spherical heads contain the sialic acid binding sites. HA monomers are synthesized as precursors that are then glycosylated and cleaved into two smaller polypeptides: the HA1 and HA2 subunits. Each HA monomer consists of a long, helical chain anchored in the membrane by HA2 and topped by a large HA1 globule.

Neutralizing antibodies

Since hemagglutinin is the major surface protein of the influenza A virus and is essential to the entry process, it is the primary target of neutralizing antibodies. Neutralizing antibodies against flu have been found to act by two different mechanisms, mirroring the dual functions of hemagglutinin:

  1. Inhibition of attachment to target cells
  2. Inhibition of membrane fusion (entry)

Most commonly, antibodies against hemagglutinin act by inhibiting attachment. This is because these antibodies bind near the top of the hemagglutinin "head" (blue region in figure at right) and physically block the interaction with sialic acid receptors on target cells.[12] In contrast, some antibodies have been found to have no effect on attachment. Instead, this latter group of antibodies acts by preventing membrane fusion (only in vitro; the efficacy of these antibodies in vivo is believed to be a result of Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity and the Complement system).[13] Most of these antibodies, like the human antibodies F10,[14] FI6,[15] CR6261, recognize sites in the stem/stalk region (orange region in figure at right), far away from the receptor binding site.[16][17]

The stem (also called HA2), contains most of the membrane fusion machinery of the hemagglutinin protein, and antibodies targeting this region block key structural changes that drive the membrane fusion process. However, at least one fusion-inhibiting antibody was found to bind closer to the top of hemagglutinin, and is thought to work by cross-linking the heads together, the opening of which is thought to be the first step in the membrane fusion process.[18]

See also

References

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  4. Unique new flu virus found in bats http://www.nhs.uk/news/2012/03march/Pages/cdc-finds-h17-bat-influenza.aspx
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  11. Stegmann T, Booy, P.F., Wilschut, J. Dec 1987, "Effects of Low pH on Influenza Virus" The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 262, No. 36, pp. 17744-17749, 1987
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