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Epistasis in the receptor-binding domain of contemporary H3N2 viruses that reverted to bind sialylated di-LacNAc repeats

Cell Reports. 2026-03; 
Ruonan Liang; Francesca Peccati; Niels L.D. Ponse; Elif Uslu; Annelies J.H. de Rooij; Alvin X. Han; Geert-Jan Boons; Luca Unione; Robert P. de Vries
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Abstract

SUMMARYSince their introduction into humans, H3N2 influenza A viruses have evolved continuously to escape immunity through antigenic drift, driven by mutations in and around the receptor-binding site. Recently, these changes resulted in viruses that recognize elongated glycans, which are less abundant in the human respiratory tract, complicating vaccine strain propagation. This study employed ELISA, glycan arrays, tissue staining, flow cytometry, and hemagglutinin (HA) assays to demonstrate the molecular determinants of recent H3N2 viruses that regained recognition of shorter glycans. Mutations Y159N/T160I in contemporary strains replace Y159/T160, weakening receptor binding. However, this is compensated by Y19... More

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