The WHO CCs used a variety of antigenic assays to analyse the 1923 A(H3N2) viruses collected and showed that the vast majority of these viruses INCB024360 were antigenically similar to MDCK-propagated A/Victoria/361/2011 A(H3N2) virus, with less than 1%
being low reacting (those with 8-fold or lower titres compared to the homologous titre; Table 1). However, ferret antisera raised against the egg-propagated A/Victoria/361/2011 virus recognised recent A(H3N2) MDCK virus isolates poorly with many viruses showing 8-fold or greater reduction in titres compared to the homologous virus titre. Ferret antisera raised to another recent egg-propagated virus (A/Texas/50/2012) that was genetically closely related to A/Victoria/361/2011, recognised many recent MDCK-propagated A(H3N2) viruses well. This is exemplified in Table 3 which shows that antiserum raised against A/Texas/50/2012 recognised the great majority of test viruses with a titre within 4-fold of the titre to the homologous antigen. An HI assay performed in the presence of 20 nM oseltamivir with guinea pig RBC (Table S2) and virus plaque-reduction (Tables S3 and S4) or microneutralisation (Table S5) assays showed similar results. Antigenic cartography showed that recently circulating cell-propagated A(H3N2) viruses clustered around both the A/Victoria/361/2011 and the A/Texas/50/2012 MDCK-propagated check details viruses with the equivalent egg-propagated viruses
being placed some distance away (Fig. 3). It was Astemizole concluded that while the majority of A(H3N2) viruses that circulated from September 2012 to February 2013 were antigenically related to the A/Victoria/361/2011 MDCK-propagated virus, they were better inhibited or neutralised by ferret antisera raised against egg-propagated A/Texas/50/2012 than by those raised against egg-propagated A/Victoria/361/2011. A simple phylogenetic tree for the HA of A(H3N2) viruses is presented in Fig. 4 and a high resolution tree with HA sequences of 872 A(H3N2) viruses collected through GISRS since
February 2012 is shown in Fig. S4. The majority of circulating viruses belonged to genetic group 3 with the signature AA substitution V223I. The group 3 viruses currently can be further divided into subgroups 3A, 3B and 3C. Subgroup 3A viruses carry AA substitutions at N144D (leading to the loss of a potential glycosylation site) and N145S in HA1. Subgroups 3B and 3C isolates carry AA substitutions A198S and N312S, while 3C viruses carry additional AA substitutions at S45N (leading to the gain of a possible glycosylation site) and T48I in HA1. Many subgroup 3C viruses also carry an additional AA substitution at N145S along with a further substitution at T128A, which results in the loss of a glycosylation site, and R142G. Groups 5 and 6 have signature AA substitutions D53N, Y94H, I230V and E280A in HA1, with group 6 isolates carrying an additional AA substitution S199A.