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Beneath the surface: Amino acid variation underlying two decades of dengue virus antigenic dynamics in Bangkok, Thailand

Authors :
Angkana T. Huang
Henrik Salje
Ana Coello Escoto
Nayeem Chowdhury
Christian Chávez
Bernardo Garcia-Carreras
Wiriya Rutvisuttinunt
Irina Maljkovic Berry
Gregory D. Gromowski
Lin Wang
Chonticha Klungthong
Butsaya Thaisomboonsuk
Ananda Nisalak
Luke M. Trimmer-Smith
Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer
Damon W. Ellison
Anthony R. Jones
Stefan Fernandez
Stephen J. Thomas
Derek J. Smith
Richard Jarman
Stephen S. Whitehead
Derek A. T. Cummings
Leah C. Katzelnick
Huang, Angkana [0000-0002-9857-3506]
Smith, Derek [0000-0002-2393-1890]
Katzelnick, Leah C [0000-0003-1033-6758]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Lowen, Anice C
Apollo-University Of Cambridge Repository
Editor: Lowen, Anice C.
Huang, Angkana T [0000-0002-9857-3506]
Source :
PLoS Pathogens, PLoS pathogens, vol 18, iss 5
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2022.

Abstract

Funder: Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases<br />Funder: Military Infectious Disease Research Program<br />Funder: Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch<br />Neutralizing antibodies are important correlates of protection against dengue. Yet, determinants of variation in neutralization across strains within the four dengue virus serotypes (DENV1-4) is imperfectly understood. Studies focus on structural DENV proteins, especially the envelope (E), the primary target of anti-DENV antibodies. Although changes in immune recognition (antigenicity) are often attributed to variation in epitope residues, viral processes influencing conformation and epitope accessibility also affect neutralizability, suggesting possible modulating roles of nonstructural proteins. We estimated effects of residue changes in all 10 DENV proteins on antigenic distances between 348 DENV collected from individuals living in Bangkok, Thailand (1994-2014). Antigenic distances were derived from response of each virus to a panel of twenty non-human primate antisera. Across 100 estimations, excluding 10% of virus pairs each time, 77 of 295 positions with residue variability in E consistently conferred antigenic effects; 52 were within ±3 sites of known binding sites of neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies, exceeding expectations from random assignments of effects to sites (p = 0.037). Effects were also identified for 16 sites on the stem/anchor of E which were only recently shown to become exposed under physiological conditions. For all proteins, except nonstructural protein 2A (NS2A), root-mean-squared-error (RMSE) in predicting distances between pairs held out in each estimation did not outperform sequences of equal length derived from all proteins or E, suggesting that antigenic signals present were likely through linkage with E. Adjusted for E, we identified 62/219 sites embedding the excess signals in NS2A. Concatenating these sites to E additionally explained 3.4% to 4.0% of observed variance in antigenic distances compared to E alone (50.5% to 50.8%); RMSE outperformed concatenating E with sites from any protein of the virus (ΔRMSE, 95%IQR: 0.01, 0.05). Our results support examining antigenic determinants beyond the DENV surface.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS Pathogens, PLoS pathogens, vol 18, iss 5
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....968b53759cae40558f62f49e4fa69276
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.84514