Isolation of an egg-adapted influenza A(H3N2) virus without amino acid substitutions at the antigenic sites of its hemagglutinin

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Abstract

Antigenic changes in the hemagglutinin protein of recent A(H3N2) viruses often arise when these viruses adapt to their egg host. By serial egg passages of a cell-propagated virus, we successfully isolated an egg-adapted influenza A(H3N2) virus, A/Saitama/103/2014, without amino acid substitutions at the antigenic sites of its hemagglutinin protein but with multiple substitutions in its neuraminidase protein. Antigenic analysis of this egg-adapted A/Saitama/103/2014 virus indicated that its antigenicity did not differ from that of the World Health Organization prototype cell-propagated vaccine virus: A/Hong Kong/4801/2014. Our results suggest that this strategy may facilitate egg-based vaccine production without antigenic alterations in hemagglutinin by egg adaptation.

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Kuwahara, T., Takashita, E., Fujisaki, S., Shirakura, M., Nakamura, K., Kishida, N., … Odagiri, T. (2018). Isolation of an egg-adapted influenza A(H3N2) virus without amino acid substitutions at the antigenic sites of its hemagglutinin. Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases, 71(3), 234–238. https://doi.org/10.7883/yoken.JJID.2017.551

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