| Literature DB >> 32721380 |
Dinah Henritzi1, Philipp Peter Petric2, Nicola Sarah Lewis3, Annika Graaf1, Alberto Pessia4, Elke Starick1, Angele Breithaupt5, Günter Strebelow1, Christine Luttermann6, Larissa Mareike Kristin Parker7, Charlotte Schröder5, Bärbel Hammerschmidt5, Georg Herrler8, Elisabeth Große Beilage9, Daniel Stadlbauer10, Viviana Simon11, Florian Krammer10, Silke Wacheck12, Stefan Pesch12, Martin Schwemmle13, Martin Beer14, Timm Clemens Harder15.
Abstract
Swine influenza A viruses (swIAVs) can play a crucial role in the generation of new human pandemic viruses. In this study, in-depth passive surveillance comprising nearly 2,500 European swine holdings and more than 18,000 individual samples identified a year-round presence of up to four major swIAV lineages on more than 50% of farms surveilled. Phylogenetic analyses show that intensive reassortment with human pandemic A(H1N1)/2009 (H1pdm) virus produced an expanding and novel repertoire of at least 31 distinct swIAV genotypes and 12 distinct hemagglutinin/neuraminidase combinations with largely unknown consequences for virulence and host tropism. Several viral isolates were resistant to the human antiviral MxA protein, a prerequisite for zoonotic transmission and stable introduction into human populations. A pronounced antigenic variation was noted in swIAV, and several H1pdm lineages antigenically distinct from current seasonal human H1pdm co-circulate in swine. Thus, European swine populations represent reservoirs for emerging IAV strains with zoonotic and, possibly, pre-pandemic potential.Entities:
Keywords: MxA; antigenic cartography; ferret model; influenza; prepandemic; surveillance; swine; zoonosis
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32721380 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2020.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023