| Literature DB >> 27431568 |
Yuhai Bi1,2,3, Haizhou Liu4, Chaochao Xiong4, Weifeng Shi5, Mingxin Li4, Siling Liu4, Jing Chen6, Guang Chen6, Yong Li6, Guoxiang Yang6, Yongsong Lei6, Yanping Xiong6, Fumin Lei7, Hanzhong Wang4, Quanjiao Chen4,3, Jianjun Chen4,3, George F Gao1,2,3,8,9.
Abstract
In May 2014, China formally confirmed the first human infection with the novel H5N6 avian influenza virus (AIV) in Sichuan Province. Before the first human case was reported, surveillance of AIVs in wild birds resulted in the detection of three H5N6 viruses in faecal samples from migratory waterfowl in Chenhu wetlands, Hubei Province, China. Genetic and phylogenetic analyses revealed that these three novel viruses were closely related to the H5N6 virus that has caused human infections in China since 2014. A Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction of all eight segments suggests multiple reassortment events in the evolution of these viruses. The hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) originated from the H5N2 and H6N6 AIVs, respectively, whereas all six internal genes were derived from avian H5N1 viruses. The reassortant may have occurred in eastern China during 2012-2013. A phylogeographic analysis of the HA and NA genes traced the viruses to southern China, from where they spread to other areas via eastern China. A receptor-binding test showed that H5N6 viruses from migratory waterfowl had human-type receptor-binding activity, suggesting a potential for transmission to humans. These data suggest that migratory waterfowl may play a role in the dissemination of novel H5N6 viruses.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27431568 PMCID: PMC4949417 DOI: 10.1038/srep29888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Maximum likelihood phylogenetic trees of HA and NA segments.
(a) ML phylogenetic tree of HA segment, (b) ML phylogenetic tree of NA segment. Migratory birds H5N6 viruses reported in this paper are marked in red, and the human-originating strain A/Sichuan/26221/2014 is marked in blue. Bootstrap values less than 50% are not shown.
Figure 2Maximum clade credibility trees of eight segments.
(a) HA segment, (b) NA segment, (c) PB2 segment, (d) PB1 segment, (e) PA segment, (f) NP segment, (g) M segment, and (h) NS segment. Horizontal bar indicates the 95% HPD of each node. Strains in parentheses indicate that these strains share identical sequences with the sequence on the tree.
Figure 3Hypothetical migration and evolutionary history of water fowl H5N6 AIVs.
Figure 4Dispersal patterns of HA (a) and NA (b) segments. Lines between locations represent branches on the MCC tree and the colour gradient indicated the height of location. Circle diameters of locations are proportional to the square root of the MCC for the location at each time point. The colour gradient indicates the relative ages of the transitions (older–recent). The phylogeographic inferences of the HA and NA segments were analysed and visualized with the spatial phylogenetic reconstruction of evolutionary dynamics using data-driven documents (SpreaD3) v0.9.659.
Figure 5Binding of the virus to α-2,3-linked (3′SLNLN) or α-2,6-linked (6′SLNLN) sialylglycan receptors was determined with solid-phase binding assays.
(a) CH1347 (A/Migratory waterfowl/Hubei/Chenhu1347/2014) virus; (b) CH1623-5 (A/Anas crecca/Hubei/Chenhu1623-5/2014) virus. Blue, binding to 3′SLNLN; red, binding to 6′SLNLN.
Figure 6Map of the migratory direction of Anas crecca in spring and the sites at which the poultry H5N6 viruses were isolated.
The Chenhu wetland is located in the migratory flyway. The migratory routes of Anas crecca in China were mapped by the ArcGIS Desktop 10.2 software (http://www.esri.com/software/arcgis/arcgis-for-desktop/).