| Literature DB >> 28880836 |
Dong-Hun Lee, Mia K Torchetti, Mary Lea Killian, Yohannes Berhane, David E Swayne.
Abstract
In March 2017, highly pathogenic avian influenza A(H7N9) was detected at 2 poultry farms in Tennessee, USA. Surveillance data and genetic analyses indicated multiple introductions of low pathogenicity avian influenza virus before mutation to high pathogenicity and interfarm transmission. Poultry surveillance should continue because low pathogenicity viruses circulate and spill over into commercial poultry.Entities:
Keywords: Alabama; H7N9; HPAI virus; Iowa; Tennessee; United States; Wyoming; backyard farm; chicken; commercial farm; farm; highly pathogenic avian influenza virus; influenza; mutation; phylogenetic analysis; poultry; respiratory infections; transmission; viruses; wild bird; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28880836 PMCID: PMC5652434 DOI: 10.3201/eid2311.171013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Genome constellation of influenza A(H7N9) viruses. Viruses are represented by ovals containing horizontal bars that represent the 8 influenza gene segments (from top to bottom: polymerase basic 2, polymerase basic 1, polymerase acidic, hemagglutinin, nucleoprotein, neuraminidase, matrix, and nonstructural). A genome reassortment event between the H7N9 virus from Saskatchewan, Canada (blue segments) and viruses from wild birds of the US Central and Mississippi Migratory Flyways (yellow segments) led to the genome assortment present in the Wyoming LPAI virus (BWT/WY/2016). The genome constellation of BWT/WY/2016 is the same as those of the Tennessee H7N9 viruses. A red bar in the hemagglutinin gene of the HPAI virus indicates the insertion at the hemagglutinin cleavage site. HPAI, highly pathogenic avian influenza; LPAI, low pathogenicity avian influenza.
Figure 2Median-joining phylogenetic network of influenza A(H7N9) viruses, United States, 2017. The median-joining network was constructed from concatenated H7N9 virus genomes containing all 8 segments. This network includes all the most parsimonious trees linking the sequences. Each unique sequence is represented by a circle sized relative to its frequency in the dataset. Isolates are colored according to the sample: red inner circle represents HPAI in poultry, yellow inner circle represents LPAI in poultry, green inner circle represents LPAI in a wild bird, purple outer circle represents isolates from Wyoming, black outer circle represents isolates from Alabama, and sky-blue outer circle represents isolates from Tennessee. Bold lines indicate farm-to-farm transmission verified by epidemiologic investigations. Red numbers indicate number of nucleotide changes between isolates. Black numbers are abbreviated isolate names. HPAI, highly pathogenic avian influenza; LPAI, low pathogenicity avian influenza.
Times to most recent common ancestors of H7N9 viruses, Tennessee and Alabama, USA, March 2017*
| Virus clusters (no. taxa)† | tMRCA‡ | BCI 95% | Posterior probability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tennessee and Alabama LPAI and HPAI viruses (22) | 2016 Oct 5 | 2016 Aug 8–2016 Dec 10 | 1.00 |
| Tennessee LPAI and HPAI viruses (15) | 2016 Dec 21 | 2016 Nov 7–2017 Feb 3 | 1.00 |
| Tennessee LPAI virus (3) | 2017 Jan 23 | 2016 Dec 3–2017 Feb 25 | 0.98 |
| Tennessee HPAI virus (12) | 2017 Jan 30 | 2017 Jan 1–2017 Feb 25 | 1.00 |
| Alabama LPAI virus from backyard guinea fowl (3) | 2017 Jan 8 | 2016 Nov 18–2017 Feb 21 | 1.00 |
| Alabama LPAI virus from commercial chicken (3) | 2017 Jan 26 | 2016 Dec 10–2017 Mar 8 | 1.00 |
*BCI, Bayesian credible interval; HPAI, highly pathogenic avian influenza; LPAI, low pathogenicity avian influenza; tMRCA, time to most recent common ancestor. †See online Technical Appendix Table (https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/EID/article/23/11/17-1013-Techapp1.pdf) for specific virus strains used in analysis. ‡Times to most recent common ancestors of hemagglutinin segment.