Hemagglutinin stalk-reactive antibodies interfere with influenza virus neuraminidase activity by steric hindrance

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Abstract

Abstract: Hemagglutinin (HA) stalk-reactive antibodies are the basis of several current “one-shot” universal influenza vaccine efforts because they protect against a wide spectrum of influenza virus strains. The appreciated mechanism of protection by HA-stalk antibodies is to inhibit HA stalk reconfiguration, blocking viral fusion and entry. This study shows that HA stalk-reactive antibodies also inhibit neuraminidase (NA) enzymatic activity, prohibiting viral egress. NA inhibition (NI) is evident for an attached substrate but not for unattached small molecule cleavage of sialic acid. This suggests that the antibodies inhibit NA enzymatic activity through steric hindrance, thus limiting NA access to sialic acids when adjacent to HA on whole virions. Consistently, F(ab’)2 fragments that occupy reduced area without loss of avidity or disrupted HA/NA interactions show significantly reduced NI activity. Notably, HA stalk binding antibodies lacking NI activity were unable to neutralize viral infection via microneutralization assays. This work suggests that NI activity is an important component of HA-stalk antibody mediated protection. Summary This study reports a new mechanism of protection that is mediated by influenza hemagglutinin-stalk reactive antibodies: inhibition of neuraminidase activity by steric hindrance, blocking access of neuraminidase to sialic acids when it is abutted next to hemagglutinin on whole virions.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00