Literature DB >> 24371072

H1N1, but not H3N2, influenza A virus infection protects ferrets from H5N1 encephalitis.

Stephanie J Bissel1, Guoji Wang, Donald M Carter, Corey J Crevar, Ted M Ross, Clayton A Wiley.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Seasonal influenza causes substantial morbidity and mortality because of efficient human-to-human spread. Rarely, zoonotic strains of influenza virus spread to humans, where they have the potential to mediate new pandemics with high mortality. We studied systemic viral spread after intranasal infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (H5N1 [A/Viet Nam/1203/2004]) in ferrets with or without prior pandemic H1N1pdm09 (A/Mexico/4108/2009) or H3N2 (A/Victoria/361/2011) infection. After intranasal challenge with H5N1 influenza virus, naive ferrets rapidly succumbed to systemic infection. Animals challenged with H5N1 influenza virus greater than 3 months after recovering from an initial H1N1pdm09 infection survived H5N1 virus challenge and cleared virus from the respiratory tract 4 days after infection. However, a prolonged low-level infection of hematopoietic elements in the small bowel lamina propria, liver, and spleen was present for greater than 2 weeks postinfection, raising the potential for reassortment of influenza genes in a host infected with multiple strains of influenza. Animals previously infected with an H3N2 influenza virus succumbed to systemic disease and encephalitis after H5N1 virus challenge. These results indicate prior infection with different seasonal influenza strains leads to radically different protection from H5N1 challenge and fatal encephalitis. IMPORTANCE: Seasonal influenza is efficiently transmitted from human to human, causing substantial morbidity and mortality. Rarely, zoonotic strains of influenza virus spread to humans, where they have the potential to mediate new pandemics with high mortality. Infection of naive ferrets with H5N1 avian influenza virus causes a rapid and lethal systemic disease. We studied systemic H5N1 viral spread after infection of ferrets with or without prior exposure to either of two seasonal influenza virus strains, H1N1 and H3N2. Ferrets previously infected with H1N1 survive H5N1 challenge while those previously infected with H3N2 die of encephalitis. However ferrets protected from lethal H5N1 infection develop persistent low-level infection of the small intestine, liver, or spleen, providing a nidus for future viral strain recombination. The mechanism by which prior infection with specific strains of seasonal influenza virus protect from lethal H5N1 challenge needs to be elucidated in order to design effective immunization and treatments.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24371072      PMCID: PMC3957958          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01840-13

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  65 in total

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Review 2.  The changing nature of avian influenza A virus (H5N1).

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Journal:  Virology       Date:  2010-03-23       Impact factor: 3.616

4.  Historical perspective--Emergence of influenza A (H1N1) viruses.

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Authors:  K Subbarao; A Klimov; J Katz; H Regnery; W Lim; H Hall; M Perdue; D Swayne; C Bender; J Huang; M Hemphill; T Rowe; M Shaw; X Xu; K Fukuda; N Cox
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10.  H1N1 Influenza Pandemic of 2009 Compared With Other Influenza Pandemics: Epidemiology, Diagnosis, Management, Pulmonary Complications, and Outcomes.

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2.  Severity of clinical disease and pathology in ferrets experimentally infected with influenza viruses is influenced by inoculum volume.

Authors:  Ian N Moore; Elaine W Lamirande; Myeisha Paskel; Danielle Donahue; Heather Kenney; Jing Qin; Kanta Subbarao
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3.  Age dependent differences in the kinetics of γδ T cells after influenza vaccination.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-07-11       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Antiviral Activities of Mulberry (Morus alba) Juice and Seed against Influenza Viruses.

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  4 in total

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