Simultaneous amino acid substitutions at antigenic sites drive influenza A hemagglutinin evolution
- *Institute of Information Science,
- †Institute of Biomedical Sciences, and
- ‡Genomics Research Center, Academia Sinica, Nankang, Taipei 115, Taiwan; and
- §Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, 1101 East 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637
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Contributed by Wen-Hsiung Li, February 15, 2007 (received for review January 30, 2007)
Abstract
The HA1 domain of HA, the major antigenic protein of influenza A viruses, contains all of the antigenic sites of HA and is under continual immune-driven selection. To resolve controversies on whether only a few or many residue sites of HA1 have undergone positive selection, whether positive selection at HA1 is continual or punctuated, and whether antigenic change is punctuated, we introduce an approach to analyze 2,248 HA1 sequences collected from 1968 to 2005. We identify 95 substitutions at 63 sites from 1968 to 2005 and show that each substitution occurred very rapidly. The rapid substitution and the fact that 57 of the 63 sites are antigenic sites indicate that hitchhiking plays a minor role and that most of these sites, many more than previously found, have undergone positive selection. Strikingly, 88 of the 95 substitutions occurred in groups, and multiple mutations at antigenic sites sped up the fixation process. Our results suggest that positive selection has been ongoing most of the time, not sporadic, and that multiple mutations at antigenic sites cumulatively enhance antigenic drift, indicating that antigenic change is less punctuated than recently proposed.
Footnotes
- ¶To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: whli{at}uchicago.edu
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Author contributions: A.C.-C.S., M.-S.H., and W.-H.L. designed research; A.C.-C.S., T.-C.H., and W.-H.L. performed research; A.C.-C.S. and T.-C.H. analyzed data; and A.C.-C.S., M.-S.H., and W.-H.L. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0701396104/DC1.
- © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





