Division of International Epidemiology and Population Studies, Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2011 Jun;7(6):e1002077. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002077. Epub 2011 Jun 9.
The emergence and rapid global spread of the swine-origin H1N1/09 pandemic influenza A virus in humans underscores the importance of swine populations as reservoirs for genetically diverse influenza viruses with the potential to infect humans. However, despite their significance for animal and human health, relatively little is known about the phylogeography of swine influenza viruses in the United States. This study utilizes an expansive data set of hemagglutinin (HA1) sequences (n = 1516) from swine influenza viruses collected in North America during the period 2003-2010. With these data we investigate the spatial dissemination of a novel influenza virus of the H1 subtype that was introduced into the North American swine population via two separate human-to-swine transmission events around 2003. Bayesian phylogeographic analysis reveals that the spatial dissemination of this influenza virus in the US swine population follows long-distance swine movements from the Southern US to the Midwest, a corn-rich commercial center that imports millions of swine annually. Hence, multiple genetically diverse influenza viruses are introduced and co-circulate in the Midwest, providing the opportunity for genomic reassortment. Overall, the Midwest serves primarily as an ecological sink for swine influenza in the US, with sources of virus genetic diversity instead located in the Southeast (mainly North Carolina) and South-central (mainly Oklahoma) regions. Understanding the importance of long-distance pig transportation in the evolution and spatial dissemination of the influenza virus in swine may inform future strategies for the surveillance and control of influenza, and perhaps other swine pathogens.
人感染猪源 H1N1/09 流感大流行病毒的出现和迅速在全球范围内传播,突显了猪群作为具有感染人类潜力的遗传多样化流感病毒储存库的重要性。然而,尽管它们对动物和人类健康具有重要意义,但对于美国猪流感病毒的系统地理学,人们了解相对较少。本研究利用了一个广泛的血凝素 (HA1) 序列数据集(n = 1516),这些序列来自 2003-2010 年期间在北美收集的猪流感病毒。利用这些数据,我们调查了一种新型 H1 亚型流感病毒在北美的空间传播情况,该病毒通过 2003 年左右的两次人类向猪的传播事件传入北美猪群。贝叶斯系统地理学分析表明,这种流感病毒在美国猪群中的空间传播遵循长距离猪的迁徙,从美国南部到中西部,这是一个富含玉米的商业中心,每年进口数百万头猪。因此,多种遗传多样化的流感病毒被引入并在中西部共同循环,为基因组重配提供了机会。总的来说,中西部主要是美国猪流感的生态汇,病毒遗传多样性的来源则位于东南部(主要是北卡罗来纳州)和中南部(主要是俄克拉荷马州)。了解长途猪运输在流感病毒在猪中的进化和空间传播中的重要性,可能为流感和其他猪病原体的监测和控制提供未来策略。