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Antigenic drift and subtype interference shape A(H3N2) epidemic dynamics in the United States

Authors :
Amanda C Perofsky
John Huddleston
Chelsea L Hansen
John R Barnes
Thomas Rowe
Xiyan Xu
Rebecca Kondor
David E Wentworth
Nicola Lewis
Lynne Whittaker
Burcu Ermetal
Ruth Harvey
Monica Galiano
Rodney Stuart Daniels
John W McCauley
Seiichiro Fujisaki
Kazuya Nakamura
Noriko Kishida
Shinji Watanabe
Hideki Hasegawa
Sheena G Sullivan
Ian G Barr
Kanta Subbarao
Florian Krammer
Trevor Bedford
Cécile Viboud
Source :
eLife, Vol 13 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2024.

Abstract

Influenza viruses continually evolve new antigenic variants, through mutations in epitopes of their major surface proteins, hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). Antigenic drift potentiates the reinfection of previously infected individuals, but the contribution of this process to variability in annual epidemics is not well understood. Here, we link influenza A(H3N2) virus evolution to regional epidemic dynamics in the United States during 1997—2019. We integrate phenotypic measures of HA antigenic drift and sequence-based measures of HA and NA fitness to infer antigenic and genetic distances between viruses circulating in successive seasons. We estimate the magnitude, severity, timing, transmission rate, age-specific patterns, and subtype dominance of each regional outbreak and find that genetic distance based on broad sets of epitope sites is the strongest evolutionary predictor of A(H3N2) virus epidemiology. Increased HA and NA epitope distance between seasons correlates with larger, more intense epidemics, higher transmission, greater A(H3N2) subtype dominance, and a greater proportion of cases in adults relative to children, consistent with increased population susceptibility. Based on random forest models, A(H1N1) incidence impacts A(H3N2) epidemics to a greater extent than viral evolution, suggesting that subtype interference is a major driver of influenza A virus infection ynamics, presumably via heterosubtypic cross-immunity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.48411453a434048a41f9bcc8eba52b3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.91849