2Moscow Infection Hospital No. 1, Volokolamskoe Shosse 63, 125367 Moscow, Russia
3Institute of Virology, Philipps University, Marburg 350937, Germany
* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Received June 15, 2005; Revision received September 26, 2006
Influenza A viruses isolated from the respiratory tract of patients with influenza were cultured in human intestinal epithelium cells (CACO-2 line). The CACO-2 cells were found to be 100-fold more susceptible to the clinical viruses than MDCK cells and chicken embryos. On passaging in CACO-2 cells, clinical isolates of the subtype H3N2 retained the original human phenotype and agglutinated human but not chicken erythrocytes, whereas on passaging in MDCK cells the virus phenotype changed to the avian one. On comparison with laboratory strains (grown in chicken embryos or MDCK cells), the clinical viruses were characterized by higher stability of the anti-interferon protein NS1 but had a reduced synthesis of the matrix protein M1, and this could facilitate the virus adaptation and escape of the infected cells from immune attack in the human body. The increased tropism to the human CACO-2 cells correlated with higher adsorption of the clinical viruses on cellular receptors. However, in the CACO-2 and MDCK cells the ratio of sialyl-containing glycoreceptors of the 2-3 and 2-6 type was similar. These observations indicated that not only sialic acid residues were involved in the adsorption and penetration of the clinical viruses into human cells, but also the protein moiety of the cellular receptor itself and/or an additional cellular coreceptor. Thus, clinical influenza viruses are shown to possess a specific mechanism of sorption and entry into human epithelial cells, which is responsible for their higher tropism to human cells and is unlike such a mechanism in canine cells.
KEY WORDS: influenza virus, virus tropism, glycosylation, CACO-2 cellsDOI: 10.1134/S0006297907040062