THE MECHANISM OF ANTIGENIC DRIFT IN INFLUENZA VIRUSES: ANALYSIS OF HONG KONG (H3N2) VARIANTS WITH MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES TO THE HEMAGGLUTININ MOLECULE*

Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies to the hemagglutinin molecule of the Hong Kong variant, Mem/1/71 (H3N2), influenza virus were used to study antigenic drift in the H3N2 subtype of influenza viruses. Antigenic variants of Mem/1/71 (H3N2) were selected after a single passage of the virus in chick embryos in the presence of monoclonal antibody. The variants showed a marked reduction in the ability to react with the monoclonal antibody used in selection. The monoclonal antibodies could be divided into three groups based on their reactions with the variants, providing evidence for at least three nonoverlapping antigenic areas on the hemagglutinin molecule. Amino acid analysis of tryptic peptides of the hemagglutinin from these variants showed that a single amino acid substitution in the heavy polypeptide chain (HA1) of the hemagglutinin molecule accounted for the reduced antibody interactions, and that variants from each group exhibited sequence changes in different areas of the molecule. Sequence changes were also detected in the HA1 polypeptides of naturally occurring H3N2 variants, but in most cases the changes in the monoclonal antibody selected variants were different from the field strains. Antigenic analysis showed that most of the variants selected with monoclonal antibody could not be distinguished from parental viruses with heterogeneous sera, suggesting that they are probably epidemiologically irrelevant. One variant, however, could be distinguished from parental virus with heterogeneous sera. This variant showed a change in sequence at residue 144 of the HA1 polypeptide from glycine in the parent to aspartic acid in the variant. Similar substitutions have been found in naturally occurring variants at this position. These studies suggest that some amino acid substitutions are more important than other for producing viruses with epidemiological potential. Antigenic analysis of naturally occurring H3N2 strains with monoclonal antibodies established that two variants co-circulated in 1968; Hong Kong/1/68 being distinguishable from Aichi/2/68 in at least two antigenic areas. It would appear that there may have been two separate lineages of H3N2 viruses, Hong Kong/1/68 giving rise to variants in England and Aichi/2/68 to variants in USA and Australia.

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