Khiabanian Hossein, Trifonov Vladimir, Rabadan Raul
Columbia University.
PLoS Curr. 2009 Aug 21;1:RRN1008. doi: 10.1371/currents.RRN1008.
Previous human influenza pandemics were the results of emerging viruses from non-human reservoirs, with at least two caused by strains of mixed human and avian origin. Also, many cases of swine influenza viruses have reportedly infected humans, including the recent human H1N1 strain, isolated in Mexico and the United States. Pigs are documented to get infected with human, avian, and swine viruses and allow productive replication, thus it has been conjectured that they are the "mixing vessel" that create reassortant strains, causing the human pandemics. In this paper, we apply several statistical techniques to an ensemble of publicly available swine viruses to study the reassortment phenomena. The reassortment patterns in swine viruses confirm previous results found in human viruses that the glycoprotein coding segments reassort most often. Moreover, one of the polymerase segments (PB1), reassorted in the strains responsible for the last two human pandemics of 1957 and 1968, also reassorts frequently.
以往的人类流感大流行是由非人类宿主中出现的病毒引起的,其中至少两次是由人类和禽类混合起源的毒株引起的。此外,据报道,许多猪流感病毒株已感染人类,包括最近在墨西哥和美国分离出的人类H1N1毒株。有记录表明,猪会感染人类、禽类和猪的病毒并实现有效复制,因此有人推测猪是产生重配毒株、引发人类大流行的“混合器”。在本文中,我们对一组公开可用的猪病毒应用了几种统计技术,以研究重配现象。猪病毒中的重配模式证实了先前在人类病毒中发现的结果,即糖蛋白编码片段最常发生重配。此外,负责1957年和1968年最后两次人类大流行的毒株中的一个聚合酶片段(PB1)也经常发生重配。