Webster R G, Bean W J, Gorman O T, Chambers T M, Kawaoka Y
Department of Virology and Molecular Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38101.
Microbiol Rev. 1992 Mar;56(1):152-79. doi: 10.1128/mr.56.1.152-179.1992.
In this review we examine the hypothesis that aquatic birds are the primordial source of all influenza viruses in other species and study the ecological features that permit the perpetuation of influenza viruses in aquatic avian species. Phylogenetic analysis of the nucleotide sequence of influenza A virus RNA segments coding for the spike proteins (HA, NA, and M2) and the internal proteins (PB2, PB1, PA, NP, M, and NS) from a wide range of hosts, geographical regions, and influenza A virus subtypes support the following conclusions. (i) Two partly overlapping reservoirs of influenza A viruses exist in migrating waterfowl and shorebirds throughout the world. These species harbor influenza viruses of all the known HA and NA subtypes. (ii) Influenza viruses have evolved into a number of host-specific lineages that are exemplified by the NP gene and include equine Prague/56, recent equine strains, classical swine and human strains, H13 gull strains, and all other avian strains. Other genes show similar patterns, but with extensive evidence of genetic reassortment. Geographical as well as host-specific lineages are evident. (iii) All of the influenza A viruses of mammalian sources originated from the avian gene pool, and it is possible that influenza B viruses also arose from the same source. (iv) The different virus lineages are predominantly host specific, but there are periodic exchanges of influenza virus genes or whole viruses between species, giving rise to pandemics of disease in humans, lower animals, and birds. (v) The influenza viruses currently circulating in humans and pigs in North America originated by transmission of all genes from the avian reservoir prior to the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic; some of the genes have subsequently been replaced by others from the influenza gene pool in birds. (vi) The influenza virus gene pool in aquatic birds of the world is probably perpetuated by low-level transmission within that species throughout the year. (vii) There is evidence that most new human pandemic strains and variants have originated in southern China. (viii) There is speculation that pigs may serve as the intermediate host in genetic exchange between influenza viruses in avian and humans, but experimental evidence is lacking. (ix) Once the ecological properties of influenza viruses are understood, it may be possible to interdict the introduction of new influenza viruses into humans.
在本综述中,我们检验了水鸟是其他物种中所有流感病毒的原始来源这一假说,并研究了使流感病毒在水鸟物种中持续存在的生态特征。对来自广泛宿主、地理区域和甲型流感病毒亚型的编码刺突蛋白(血凝素、神经氨酸酶和M2)及内部蛋白(PB2、PB1、PA、核蛋白、基质蛋白和非结构蛋白)的甲型流感病毒RNA片段的核苷酸序列进行系统发育分析,支持以下结论。(i)在世界各地的候鸟和滨鸟中存在两个部分重叠的甲型流感病毒储存库。这些物种携带着所有已知血凝素和神经氨酸酶亚型的流感病毒。(ii)流感病毒已进化成许多宿主特异性谱系,以核蛋白基因为例,包括马布拉格/56株、近期马毒株、经典猪和人毒株、H13海鸥毒株以及所有其他禽毒株。其他基因显示出类似模式,但有大量基因重配的证据。地理以及宿主特异性谱系很明显。(iii)所有哺乳动物来源的甲型流感病毒均起源于禽类基因库,乙型流感病毒也有可能起源于同一来源。(iv)不同的病毒谱系主要具有宿主特异性,但物种之间会定期交换流感病毒基因或整个病毒,从而引发人类、低等动物和鸟类的疾病大流行。(v)目前在北美人类和猪中传播的流感病毒起源于1918年西班牙流感大流行之前所有基因从禽类储存库的传播;随后一些基因被来自鸟类流感基因库的其他基因所取代。(vi)世界水鸟中的流感病毒基因库可能通过该物种全年的低水平传播而持续存在。(vii)有证据表明,大多数新的人类大流行毒株和变异株起源于中国南方。(viii)有人推测猪可能是流感病毒在禽类和人类之间进行基因交换的中间宿主,但缺乏实验证据。(ix)一旦了解了流感病毒的生态特性,就有可能阻断新的流感病毒传入人类。