Abstract Background The amino acid substitution model is the core component of many protein analysis systems such as sequence similarity search, sequence alignment, and phylogenetic inference. Although several general amino acid substitution models have been estimated from large and diverse protein databases, they remain inappropriate for analyzing specific species, e.g., viruses. Emerging epidemics of influenza viruses raise the need for comprehensive studies of these dangerous viruses. We propose an influenza-specific amino acid substitution model to enhance the understanding of the evolution of influenza viruses. Results A maximum likelihood approach was applied to estimate an amino acid substitution model (FLU) from ~113, 000 influenza ...
In 2009, a new strain of H1N1 influenza A virus caused a pandemic, and its descendant strains are ca...
Motivation: Modelling antigenic shift in influenza A H3N2 can help to predict the efficiency of vacc...
Evolution drives changes in a protein’s sequence over time. The extent to which these changes in seq...
Abstract Background Finding the amino acid mutations that affect the severity of influenza infection...
Influenza is a persistent threat to humans, resulting in millions of cases of severe illnesses and a...
In the efforts to understand the molecular character-istics responsible for the ability of influenza...
Abstract: Amino acid substitutions in influenza A virus are the main reasons for both antigenic shif...
Amino acid substitutions in influenza A virus are the main reasons for both antigenic shift and viru...
markdownabstractInfluenza viruses escape antibody-mediated neutralization by accumulating amino acid...
BackgroundEpistasis is one of the central themes in viral evolution due to its importance in drug re...
Seasonal influenza viruses repeatedly infect humans in part because they rapidly change their antige...
<p>Amino acids at positions from 145 to 204 are shown. Boxed residues indicate the positions 156 (bl...
Abstract Background The identification of mutations that confer unique properties to a pathogen, suc...
Influenza viruses escape antibody-mediated neutralization by accumulating amino acid substitutions i...
Determining phenotype from genetic data is a fundamental challenge. Identification of emerging antig...
In 2009, a new strain of H1N1 influenza A virus caused a pandemic, and its descendant strains are ca...
Motivation: Modelling antigenic shift in influenza A H3N2 can help to predict the efficiency of vacc...
Evolution drives changes in a protein’s sequence over time. The extent to which these changes in seq...
Abstract Background Finding the amino acid mutations that affect the severity of influenza infection...
Influenza is a persistent threat to humans, resulting in millions of cases of severe illnesses and a...
In the efforts to understand the molecular character-istics responsible for the ability of influenza...
Abstract: Amino acid substitutions in influenza A virus are the main reasons for both antigenic shif...
Amino acid substitutions in influenza A virus are the main reasons for both antigenic shift and viru...
markdownabstractInfluenza viruses escape antibody-mediated neutralization by accumulating amino acid...
BackgroundEpistasis is one of the central themes in viral evolution due to its importance in drug re...
Seasonal influenza viruses repeatedly infect humans in part because they rapidly change their antige...
<p>Amino acids at positions from 145 to 204 are shown. Boxed residues indicate the positions 156 (bl...
Abstract Background The identification of mutations that confer unique properties to a pathogen, suc...
Influenza viruses escape antibody-mediated neutralization by accumulating amino acid substitutions i...
Determining phenotype from genetic data is a fundamental challenge. Identification of emerging antig...
In 2009, a new strain of H1N1 influenza A virus caused a pandemic, and its descendant strains are ca...
Motivation: Modelling antigenic shift in influenza A H3N2 can help to predict the efficiency of vacc...
Evolution drives changes in a protein’s sequence over time. The extent to which these changes in seq...