AVM v1, released 02-OCT-22

A manually curated database of aerosol-transmitted virus mutations, human diseases, and drugs

Mutation detail:


Mutation site V336I
Virus Influenzavirus A H1N1
Mutation level Amino acid Level
Gene/protein/region type PB1
Gene ID 23308122
Country -
Mutation type nonsynonymous mutation
Genotype/subtype/clade -
Sample cell line
Variants -
Viral reference sequence FJ966080.1
Drug/antibody/vaccine -
Transmissibility -
Transmission mechanism -
Pathogenicity increase
Pathogenicity mechanism -
Immune escape mutation -
Immune escape mechanism -
RT-PCR primers probes -

Protein detail:


Protein name Polymerase PB1
Uniprot protein ID C3W5X7
Protein length 757 amino acids
Protein description RNA-dependent RNA polymerase which is responsible for replication and transcription of virus RNA segments. The transcription of viral mRNAs occurs by a unique mechanism called cap-snatching. 5' methylated caps of cellular mRNAs are cleaved after 10-13 nucleotides by PA. In turn, these short capped RNAs are used as primers by PB1 for transcription of viral mRNAs. During virus replication, PB1 initiates RNA synthesis and copy vRNA into complementary RNA (cRNA) which in turn serves as a template for the production of more vRNAs

Literature information:


Pubmed ID 20140252
Clinical information No
Disease -
Published year 2010
Journal PLoS One
Title Complete-proteome mapping of human influenza A adaptive mutations: implications for human transmissibility of zoonotic strains
Author Olivo Miotto,A T Heiny,Randy Albrecht,Adolfo GarcĂ­a-Sastre,Tin Wee Tan
Evidence The repeated emergence of the PB1 V336I mutation suggests that it plays an important adaptive role that should be further investigated.