Influenza Division, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 12;8(7):e68522. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068522. Print 2013.
Surveillance for influenza A viruses in wild birds has increased substantially as part of efforts to control the global movement of highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) virus. Studies conducted in Egypt from 2003 to 2007 to monitor birds for H5N1 identified multiple subtypes of low pathogenicity avian influenza A viruses isolated primarily from migratory waterfowl collected in the Nile Delta. Phylogenetic analysis of 28 viral genomes was performed to estimate their nearest ancestors and identify possible reassortants. Migratory flyway patterns were included in the analysis to assess gene flow between overlapping flyways. Overall, the viruses were most closely related to Eurasian, African and/or Central Asian lineage low pathogenicity viruses and belonged to 15 different subtypes. A subset of the internal genes seemed to originate from specific flyways (Black Sea-Mediterranean, East African-West Asian). The remaining genes were derived from a mixture of viruses broadly distributed across as many as 4 different flyways suggesting the importance of the Nile Delta for virus dispersal. Molecular clock date estimates suggested that the time to the nearest common ancestor of all viruses analyzed ranged from 5 to 10 years, indicating frequent genetic exchange with viruses sampled elsewhere. The intersection of multiple migratory bird flyways and the resulting diversity of influenza virus gene lineages in the Nile Delta create conditions favoring reassortment, as evident from the gene constellations identified by this study. In conclusion, we present for the first time a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of full genome sequences from low pathogenic avian influenza viruses circulating in Egypt, underscoring the significance of the region for viral reassortment and the potential emergence of novel avian influenza A viruses, as well as representing a highly diverse influenza A virus gene pool that merits continued monitoring.
作为控制高致病性禽流感病毒(H5N1)全球传播努力的一部分,对野生鸟类中的甲型流感病毒进行监测的工作已经大大增加。2003 年至 2007 年期间,埃及在监测鸟类中 H5N1 的研究中,从尼罗河三角洲收集的迁徙水禽中分离出了多种低致病性禽流感 A 病毒亚型。对 28 个病毒基因组进行了系统发育分析,以估计其最近的祖先并确定可能的重组病毒。迁徙飞行模式被纳入分析中,以评估重叠飞行模式之间的基因流动。总体而言,这些病毒与欧亚、非洲和/或中亚谱系的低致病性病毒最为密切相关,属于 15 种不同的亚型。一组内部基因似乎起源于特定的飞行模式(黑海-地中海、东非-西亚)。其余的基因源自广泛分布于多达 4 种不同飞行模式的病毒混合物,这表明尼罗河三角洲对病毒传播很重要。分子钟日期估计表明,所有分析病毒的最近共同祖先时间范围为 5 至 10 年,表明与其他地方采样的病毒经常发生遗传交换。多条候鸟迁徙路线的交汇以及尼罗河三角洲流感病毒基因谱系的多样性创造了有利于重组的条件,正如本研究确定的基因组合所表明的那样。总之,我们首次对在埃及循环的低致病性禽流感病毒的全基因组序列进行了全面的系统发育分析,强调了该地区对病毒重组和新型甲型流感病毒出现的重要性,以及代表了一个高度多样化的流感病毒基因库,值得持续监测。