Title :
Notice of Retraction
Analysis In Silico of Epitopes on 2009 Pandemic H1N1 Virus Proteins
Author :
Xianwu Guo ; Ramirez, E.L. ; Cabrera, A.S. ; Yajuan Fu
Author_Institution :
Centra de Biotecnologia Genomica, Inst. Politec. Nac., Reynosa, Mexico
Abstract :
Notice of Retraction
After careful and considered review of the content of this paper by a duly constituted expert committee, this paper has been found to be in violation of IEEE´s Publication Principles.
We hereby retract the content of this paper. Reasonable effort should be made to remove all past references to this paper.
The presenting author of this paper has the option to appeal this decision by contacting TPII@ieee.org.
The World Health Organization (WHO) declared an end to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic globally on August 10, 2010, indicating H1N1 influenza virus has moved into the post pandemic period. For better understanding the infection, it is necessary to analyze the molecular basis for immunity against new pandemic virus. With the help of Immune Epitope Database (IEDB), 18 B-cell epitopes and 339 T-cell epitopes have been found, more than double epitopes of the early research for this pandemic virus. 9 new epitopes (8 for T-cell and 1 for B-cell) that do not exist in the recent seasonal virus were determined. For B cell responses, neutralizing epitopes are primarily located on the virion surface proteins HA and NA but in pandemic strains only a small part of epitopes in HA and NA for B-cell are conserved. The tridimensional structure analysis of epitopes helps us to understand that there is no apparent neutralizing antibody against the pandemic virus in the general human population after vaccination with seasonal influenza vaccine. On the other hand, the new epitopes to human could have role in protection from the subsequent infection from swine and avian influenza virus due to that the new virus contains the epitopes from swine and avian viruses, including the high virulent serotype H5N1.
Keywords :
cellular biophysics; diseases; epidemics; microorganisms; molecular biophysics; patient treatment; proteins; H1N1 influenza virus; World Health Organization; avian influenza virus; epitopes; general human population; immune epitope database; immunity; in silico analysis; infection; molecular basis; neutralizing antibody; pandemic H1N1 virus proteins; pandemic strains; seasonal influenza vaccine; swine; tridimensional structure analysis; vaccination; virulent serotype H5N1; Databases; Humans; Immune system; Influenza; Proteins; Strain;
Conference_Titel :
Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering, (iCBBE) 2011 5th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Wuhan
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5088-6
DOI :
10.1109/icbbe.2011.5780080