| Literature DB >> 25645259 |
Ying Chen1, Yan-Ning Mo2, Hua-Bo Zhou3, Zu-Zhang Wei4, Guo-Jun Wang5, Qing-Xiong Yu6, Xiong Xiao7, Wen-Juan Yang8, Wei-Jian Huang9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: After the 1968 H3N2 pandemic emerged in humans, H3N2 influenza viruses continuously circulated and evolved in nature. An H3N2 variant was circulating in humans in the 1990s and subsequently introduced into the pig population in the 2000s. This virus gradually became the main subtype of swine influenza virus worldwide. However, there were no reports of infections in dogs with this virus.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25645259 PMCID: PMC4324672 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-015-0243-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Description of two H3N2 canine influenza viruses from Guangxi in 2013
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| English sheepdog | Liuzhou | 5/3/2013 | Female | 2 months | gastroenteritis, diarrhea, Canine Parvovirus Virus (CPV) positive | A/canine/Guangxi/L1/2013(H3N2) |
| Samoyed | Liuzhou | 5/10/2013 | Male | 14 months | Cough, sneeze, nasal discharge, low appetite, depression; body temperature:39.5°C | A/canine/Guangxi/L2/2013(H3N2) |
aThe sequence for two strains were shown in GenBank with the accession numbers KJ013179-KJ013194.
Sequence identity of genes of the two H3N2 CIVs isolated in Guangxi to related sequence in GenBank
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| HA | A/swine/Henan/1/2010(H3N2) | 99.9 | KF277766 | human | T192I, V196A, V226I, |
| NA | A/swine/Zhejiang/01/2008(H1N2) | 99.7 | JX138511 | human |
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| PB1 | A/Swine/Shandong/3/2005(H3N2) | 99.8 | EU116037 | human | E75D, |
| PB2 | A/swine/Henan/1/2010(H3N2) | 99.6 | KF541238 | human | E241D, F600L, T745A |
| PA | A/swine/Henan/1/2010(H3N2) | 99.8 | KF541239 | human | Q346K |
| NP | A/Swine/Shandong/3/2005(H3N2) | 99.8 | EU116041 | human | M105I, |
| M | A/swine/Guangdong/L22/2010(H3N2) | 99.8 | JX494713 | human | M1: S275P; M2: |
| NS | A/swine/Zhejiang/01/2008(H1N2) | 100 | JX138513 | human | NEP: V82A |
aThe results of identities were dependent on BLASTn analysis.
bbold font letter represent the amino acid substitution found in the gene segment of two H3N2 CIVs.
Figure 1Phylogenetic trees of eight gene segments of two H3N2 CIVs and reference isolates. The trees were generated with the MEGA 5.2 program using neighbor-joining analysis. The bootstrap percentages are shown above the nodes that were supported in >70% of 1000 replicates. The viruses isolated in our study are shown in black round circles. The phylogenetic trees are shown in (a) HA gene, (b) NA gene, (c) NP gene, (d) PA gene, (e) PB1gene, (f) PB2 gene, (g) M gene, and (h) NS gene.
Figure 2Alignment of HA1 amino acid sequences of two H3N2 CIVs and representative H3N2 human and swine influenza viruses. Antigenic sites are indicated by solid boxes (lower case letters indicate discrete antigenic sites), residues in yellow denote the receptor-binding sites, and residues in grey represent the potential glycosylation sites. The cleavage sites are in the dotted box.