Antigenic variation in the haemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein of influenza virus is associated with recurrent epidemics of respiratory disease in man (for review see ref. 1). We have examined the size of structural changes necessary to alter the antigenicity of HA by determining the three-dimensional structure of the HA from an antigenic mutant containing a single amino acid substitution which was selected by growth of virus in the presence of monoclonal antibodies. Here we present evidence that the simple addition of an amino acid side chain which results in only minor local distortions of the structure of the HA is sufficient structural alteration for a virus to escape neutralization by a monoclonal antibody. Our results also demonstrate that single amino acid substitutions can cause only local changes in the HA structure, verifying the assumption made in several studies to locate antigenic sites on the HA 2-5 and other molecules6,7 and indicate that proposals8,9 of large conformational changes to account for variations in HA antigenicity are unnecessary in this case. The structure of the variant antigen has independently been successfully predicted (M. Karplus, personal communication). © 1984 Nature Publishing Group.
CITATION STYLE
Knossow, M., Daniels, R. S., Douglas, A. R., Skehel, J. J., & Wiley, D. C. (1984). Three-dimensional structure of an antigenic mutant of the influenza virus haemagglutinin. Nature, 311(5987), 678–680. https://doi.org/10.1038/311678a0
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