Obenauer John C, Denson Jackie, Mehta Perdeep K, Su Xiaoping, Mukatira Suraj, Finkelstein David B, Xu Xiequn, Wang Jinhua, Ma Jing, Fan Yiping, Rakestraw Karen M, Webster Robert G, Hoffmann Erich, Krauss Scott, Zheng Jie, Zhang Ziwei, Naeve Clayton W
Hartwell Center for Bioinformatics and Biotechnology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38105, USA.
Science. 2006 Mar 17;311(5767):1576-80. doi: 10.1126/science.1121586. Epub 2006 Jan 26.
The spread of H5N1 avian influenza viruses (AIVs) from China to Europe has raised global concern about their potential to infect humans and cause a pandemic. In spite of their substantial threat to human health, remarkably little AIV whole-genome information is available. We report here a preliminary analysis of the first large-scale sequencing of AIVs, including 2196 AIV genes and 169 complete genomes. We combine this new information with public AIV data to identify new gene alleles, persistent genotypes, compensatory mutations, and a potential virulence determinant.
H5N1禽流感病毒(AIV)从中国传播至欧洲引发了全球对其感染人类并导致大流行可能性的担忧。尽管它们对人类健康构成重大威胁,但可获得的AIV全基因组信息却非常少。我们在此报告对AIV首次大规模测序的初步分析,包括2196个AIV基因和169个完整基因组。我们将这些新信息与公开的AIV数据相结合,以识别新的基因等位基因、持续存在的基因型、补偿性突变以及一个潜在的毒力决定因素。