| Literature DB >> 27030268 |
Dayan Wang1, Lei Yang1, Wenfei Zhu1, Ye Zhang1, Shumei Zou1, Hong Bo1, Rongbao Gao1, Jie Dong1, Weijuan Huang1, Junfeng Guo1, Zi Li1, Xiang Zhao1, Xiaodan Li1, Li Xin1, Jianfang Zhou1, Tao Chen1, Libo Dong1, Hejiang Wei1, Xiyan Li1, Liqi Liu1, Jing Tang1, Yu Lan1, Jing Yang1, Yuelong Shu2.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Due to enzootic infections in poultry and persistent human infections in China, influenza A (H7N9) virus has remained a public health threat. The Yangtze River Delta region, which is located in eastern China, is well recognized as the original source for H7N9 outbreaks. Based on the evolutionary analysis of H7N9 viruses from all three outbreak waves since 2013, we identified the Pearl River Delta region as an additional H7N9 outbreak source. H7N9 viruses are repeatedly introduced from these two sources to the other areas, and the persistent circulation of H7N9 viruses occurs in poultry, causing continuous outbreak waves. Poultry movements may contribute to the geographic expansion of the virus. In addition, the AnH1 genotype, which was predominant during wave 1, was replaced by JS537, JS18828, and AnH1887 genotypes during waves 2 and 3. The establishment of a new source and the continuous evolution of the virus hamper the elimination of H7N9 viruses, thus posing a long-term threat of H7N9 infection in humans. Therefore, both surveillance of H7N9 viruses in humans and poultry and supervision of poultry movements should be strengthened. IMPORTANCE: Since its occurrence in humans in eastern China in spring 2013, the avian H7N9 viruses have been demonstrating the continuing pandemic threat posed by the current influenza ecosystem in China. As the viruses are silently circulated in poultry, with potentially severe outcomes in humans, H7N9 virus activity in humans in China is very important to understand. In this study, we identified a newly emerged H7N9 outbreak source in the Pearl River Delta region. Both sources in the Yangtze River Delta region and the Pearl River Delta region have been established and found to be responsible for the H7N9 outbreaks in mainland China.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27030268 PMCID: PMC4886776 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.03173-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103