| Literature DB >> 27486732 |
Se Mi Kim1, Young-Il Kim1, Philippe Noriel Q Pascua1, Young Ki Choi1.
Abstract
Although efficient human-to-human transmission of avian influenza virus has yet to be seen, in the past two decades avian-to-human transmission of influenza A viruses has been reported. Influenza A/H5N1, in particular, has repeatedly caused human infections associated with high mortality, and since 1998 the virus has evolved into many clades of variants with significant antigenic diversity. In 2013, three (A/H7N9, A/H6N1, and A/H10N8) novel avian influenza viruses (AIVs) breached the animal-human host species barrier in Asia. In humans, roughly 35% of A/H7N9-infected patients succumbed to the zoonotic infection, and two of three A/H10N8 human infections were also lethal; however, neither of these viruses cause influenza-like symptoms in poultry. While most of these cases were associated with direct contact with infected poultry, some involved sustained human-to-human transmission. Thus, these events elicited concern regarding potential AIV pandemics. This article reviews the human incursions associated with AIV variants and the potential role of pigs as an intermediate host that may hasten AIV evolution. In addition, we discuss the known influenza A virus virulence and transmission factors and their evaluation in animal models. With the growing number of human AIV infections, constant vigilance for the emergence of novel viruses is of utmost importance. In addition, careful characterization and pathobiological assessment of these novel variants will help to identify strains of particular concern for future pandemics. Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27486732 PMCID: PMC7171714 DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1584953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Respir Crit Care Med ISSN: 1069-3424 Impact factor: 3.119
Fig. 1Reservoir of influenza viruses. It is known that wild aquatic birds are the source of all influenza viruses in other species. Although transmission between humans and pigs had already been demonstrated and confirmed, direct transmission of avian-to-humans have been less frequent (such as those with H9N2 and H5N1 subtypes) but sometimes with fatal outcome.
Reported cases of human infections with avian influenza A viruses
| Subtype | Nation and year | Symptoms | Confirmed cases/ |
|---|---|---|---|
| H4N8 | US (1991) | Acute respiratory symptoms | 1/0 |
| H5N1 | HK (1997), AZ, BD, CN, DJ, EG, HK, ID, IQ, KH, LA, MM, NG, PK, TH, TR, VN (2003–2013) | Fever, headache, muscle aches, cough, sore throat, eye infections, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress | 826/440 |
| H6N1 | US (1991), TW (2013) | Acute respiratory symptoms and | 3/0 |
| H7N2 | US (2002–2003), UK (2007) | Conjunctivitis, mild influenza-like illness | 4/0 |
| H7N3 | IT (1999–2003), CA (2004), UK (2006), MX (2012) | Conjunctivitis, no fever, respiratory symptoms | 12/0 |
| H7N7 | US (1959,1979), AU (1977), UK (1996), NL (2003) | Conjunctivitis, influenza-like illness, fever, pneumonia | 90/1 |
| H7N9 | CN (2013–2015), HK (2013), TW (2013), CA (2015), US (2015) | Acute respiratory distress syndrome and multi-organ failure | 678/271 |
| H9N2 | CN, HK (1998–1999, 2003, 2007, 2009), BD (2011) | Low fever, headache, sneezing, runny nose, vomiting, influenza-like illness | 16/0 |
| H10N7 | US (1991), EG (2004), AT (2010) | Acute respiratory symptoms | 10/0 |
| H10N8 | CN (2013–2014) | Severe pneumonia | 3/0 |
Abbreviations: AZ, Azerbaijan; AT, Austria; BD, Bangladesh; KH, Cambodia; CA, Canada; CN, China; DJ, Djibouti; EG, Egypt; HK, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China; ID, Indonesia; IQ, Iraq; IT, Italy; LA, Laos; MX, Mexico; MM, Myanmar; NL, Netherland; NG, Nigeria; PK, Pakistan; TH, Thailand; TR, Turkey; TW, Taiwan; UK, United Kingdom; US, United States; VN, Vietnam.
Fig. 2Schematic diagram model of multiple reassortment events of human infected novel influenza viruses from avian (H7N9, H10N8 and H6N1). The colors of the eight gene segments in the ovals represent origin viruses. As the diagram show, same colors is same linage (H9N2) and different colors is different viruses.
Fig. 3Pigs promote the generation of novel viruses with pandemic potential. Pigs are potential reservoir of old virus strains for subsequent infection of human populations. Avian influenza viruses that infect humans could undergo adaptation altering its receptor-binding affinity to those for human epithelial receptors. Lastly, coinfection of an avian and mammalian virus in a single host cell could generate novel virus genotypes (∼256 recombinant viruses could be generated from two parental viruses), one of which could cause the next pandemic.
Common determinants of viral pathogenicity
| Protein | Position | Pathogenicity | Function | Reference (s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | High | ||||
|
| 591 | Gln (Q) | Lys (K) | Increased virulence in mammals | Yamada et al |
| 627 | Glu (G) | Lys (K) | Replicative ability in some mammals, including humans | Subbarao et al | |
| Hatta et al | |||||
| 701 | Asp (D) | Asn (N) | Nuclear import kinetics affecting replicative ability in mice | Li et al | |
| Gabriel et al | |||||
|
| 66 | Asn (N) | Ser (S) | Induction of apoptosis | Conenello et al |
|
| 97 | Thr (T) | Ile (I) | Enhanced virulence | Song et al |
|
| Cleavage site | Single basic amino acid | Polybasic amino acid | HA cleavability, tropism | Kawaoka et al |
| 222 | Gln (Q) | Leu (L) | Increased virus binding to 2,6, airborne transmissibility in mammals | Yen et al | |
| 223 | Ser (S) | Asn (N) | |||
| 224 | Glu (G) | Ser (S) | |||
|
| 223 | Thr (T) | Ile (I) | Increased virulence in mammals | LeGoff et al |
| 275 | His (H) | Tyr (Y) | de Vries et al | ||
|
| 92 | Asp (D) | Glu (E) | Evasion/suppression of interferon response | Seo et al |
Abbreviations: HA, hemagglutinin; NA, neuraminidase; NS1, nonstructural protein 1; PA, polymerase acidic; PB1-F2, alternate open reading frame near the 5' end of the polymerase basic 1 gene; PB2, polymerase basic protein 2.
General animal models for influenza virus
| Animal model | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
|
| Low cost (purchase, maintenance, | Not for natural host of influenza virus |
| Well-characterized genetics; microarray and knockouts | Anatomy and histology of respiratory tract and pattern of influenza virus attachment dissimilar to humans | |
| Minimal host variability and background pathology of inbred SPF strains | Most strains demonstrate hypothermia, but not real fever | |
| Availability of molecular virology/Immunology reagent | ||
| Unsuitable for live-attenuated vaccines | ||
| Unsuitable for transmission experiments | ||
|
| Pathology of influenza viral pneumonia comparable to humans | Variable outcome results depend on the age, inoculum titer, and volume |
| Anatomy and histology of respiratory tract moderately similar to humans and similar pattern of influenza virus attachment | Very limited ferret specific immunological reagents | |
| Suitable for transmission experiments | Require special caging; No SPF animals, so need to confirm Aleutian disease and initial influenza seronegative status, | |
| Apt animal size for blood and tissue sampling | Outbred, Relatively expensive | |
| Few molecular biological reagents available | ||
|
| Human and Avian influenza virus isolates replicate without prior adaptation | Variable host responses, Need to confirm initial influenza seronegative status |
| Suitable for transmission experiments | Pathology of influenza viral pneumonia dissimilar to humans | |
| Usually no clinical symptoms after virus challenge, | ||
|
| Pathology of influenza viral pneumonia comparable to humans | Expensive, Need of animal handling experience |
| May display similar clinical symptoms to humans | No SPF animals, thus need to confirm initial influenza seronegative status | |
| Anatomy and histology of respiratory tract and immune response similar to humans | May different susceptible to human influenza viruses | |
| Many available molecular biological reagents and cross-reaction with human reagents | May different disease outcome and clinical signs dependent on species, virus strain, and inoculation routes | |
| Similar immune responses as humans | Need to confirm the sialic acid receptor distribution and pattern of viral attachment in respiratory tracts |
Abbreviation: SPF, specific pathogen free.