Avian influenza viruses depend on importin-alpha3 for efficient replication, whereas mammalian-adapted viruses depend on importin-alpha7, highlighting the role of the nuclear envelope in interspecies transmission.
The adaptation of influenza A virus polymerase to specific host importin-alpha isoforms (α3 for avian, α7 for mammalian) is a key determinant of interspecies transmission and viral tropism.
Influenza A viruses are a threat to humans due to their ability to cross species barriers, as illustrated by the 2009 H1N1v pandemic and sporadic H5N1 transmissions. Interspecies transmission requires adaptation of the viral polymerase to importin-α, a cellular protein that mediates transport into the nucleus where transcription and replication of the viral genome takes place. In this study, we analysed replication, host specificity and pathogenicity of avian and mammalian influenza viruses, in importin-α-silenced cells and importin-α-knockout mice, to understand the role of individual importin-α isoforms in adaptation. For efficient virus replication, the polymerase subunit PB2 and the nucleoprotein (NP) of avian viruses required importin-α3, whereas PB2 and NP of mammalian viruses showed importin-α7 specificity. H1N1v replication depended on both, importin-α3 and -α7, suggesting ongoing adaptation of this virus. Thus, differences in importin-α specificity are determinants of host range underlining the importance of the nuclear envelope in interspecies transmission. Interspecies transmission of influenza A viruses requires adaptation of the viral polymerase to the host importin-α. Here, the polymerase subunit PB2 and the nucleoprotein of avian viruses are found to require importin-α3, whereas mammalian viruses are shown to require importin-α7.
Gabriel et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Influenza A virus infection. Importin-alpha7 knockout or silencing vs. Wild-type or control cells/mice was evaluated on Viral replication and survival. Avian influenza viruses depend on importin-alpha3 for efficient replication, whereas mammalian-adapted viruses depend on importin-alpha7, highlighting the role of the nuclear envelope in interspecies transmission.
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