Evolutionary characteristics of influenza B virus since its first isolation in 1940: Dynamic circulation of deletion and insertion mechanism

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Abstract

New antigenic variants of B/Yamagata/16/88-like lineage which appeared in the season of 1997 as a minor strain tended to predominate in the following season. Also, we could observe for the first time, three peaks of activity caused by H3N2 virus and two variants orb influenza virus. Antigenic and phylogenetic analyses revealed that B/Victoria/2/87-like variants appeared again in Japan in 1997 after a nine-year absence. Influenza B viruses evolved into three major lineages, including the earliest strain (I), B/Yamagata/16/88-like variants (II), which comprised of three sublineages (II-(i), II-(ii), II-(iii)), and B/Victoria/2/87-like variants (III). Evolution of influenza B virus hemagglutinin was apparently distinguishable from that of influenza A virus, showing a systematic mechanism of nucleotide deletion and insertion. This phenomenon was observed to be closely related to evolutionary pathways of I, II-(i), II-(ii), II-(iii) and III lineages. It was noteworthy to reveal that the nucleotide deletion and insertion mechanism of influenza B Virus completed one cycle over a fifty-year period, and that a three nucleotide deletion was again observed in 1997 strains belonging to lineage II-(iii). It was evident that amino acid substitutions accompanying nucleotide insertions were highly conserved.

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Nerome, R., Hiromoto, Y., Sugita, S., Tanabe, N., Ishida, M., Matsumoto, M., … Nerome, K. (1998). Evolutionary characteristics of influenza B virus since its first isolation in 1940: Dynamic circulation of deletion and insertion mechanism. Archives of Virology, 143(8), 1569–1583. https://doi.org/10.1007/s007050050399

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