Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Virol. 2014 Mar;88(6):3077-91. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01840-13. Epub 2013 Dec 26.
Seasonal influenza causes substantial morbidity and mortality because of efficient human-to-human spread. Rarely, zoonotic strains of influenza virus spread to humans, where they have the potential to mediate new pandemics with high mortality. We studied systemic viral spread after intranasal infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (H5N1 [A/Viet Nam/1203/2004]) in ferrets with or without prior pandemic H1N1pdm09 (A/Mexico/4108/2009) or H3N2 (A/Victoria/361/2011) infection. After intranasal challenge with H5N1 influenza virus, naive ferrets rapidly succumbed to systemic infection. Animals challenged with H5N1 influenza virus greater than 3 months after recovering from an initial H1N1pdm09 infection survived H5N1 virus challenge and cleared virus from the respiratory tract 4 days after infection. However, a prolonged low-level infection of hematopoietic elements in the small bowel lamina propria, liver, and spleen was present for greater than 2 weeks postinfection, raising the potential for reassortment of influenza genes in a host infected with multiple strains of influenza. Animals previously infected with an H3N2 influenza virus succumbed to systemic disease and encephalitis after H5N1 virus challenge. These results indicate prior infection with different seasonal influenza strains leads to radically different protection from H5N1 challenge and fatal encephalitis.
Seasonal influenza is efficiently transmitted from human to human, causing substantial morbidity and mortality. Rarely, zoonotic strains of influenza virus spread to humans, where they have the potential to mediate new pandemics with high mortality. Infection of naive ferrets with H5N1 avian influenza virus causes a rapid and lethal systemic disease. We studied systemic H5N1 viral spread after infection of ferrets with or without prior exposure to either of two seasonal influenza virus strains, H1N1 and H3N2. Ferrets previously infected with H1N1 survive H5N1 challenge while those previously infected with H3N2 die of encephalitis. However ferrets protected from lethal H5N1 infection develop persistent low-level infection of the small intestine, liver, or spleen, providing a nidus for future viral strain recombination. The mechanism by which prior infection with specific strains of seasonal influenza virus protect from lethal H5N1 challenge needs to be elucidated in order to design effective immunization and treatments.
季节性流感可通过高效的人际传播导致大量发病和死亡。罕见情况下,流感病毒的动物源菌株会传播给人类,从而有可能引发高死亡率的新型大流行。我们研究了在未感染过或已感染过季节性流感病毒 H1N1pdm09(A/Mexico/4108/2009)或 H3N2(A/Victoria/361/2011)的雪貂中经鼻感染高致病性禽流感病毒(H5N1[A/Viet Nam/1203/2004])后的全身病毒传播情况。在从初次感染 H1N1pdm09 中恢复后超过 3 个月时经鼻感染 H5N1 流感病毒的雪貂存活下来,并在感染后 4 天从呼吸道清除了病毒。然而,在感染后 2 周以上,仍存在小肠道固有层、肝脏和脾脏造血元素的低水平持续感染,这增加了感染多种流感病毒株的宿主中流感基因重配的可能性。在感染 H5N1 病毒之前感染过 H3N2 流感病毒的动物在感染 H5N1 病毒后会死于全身疾病和脑炎。这些结果表明,先前感染不同的季节性流感株会导致对 H5N1 挑战产生截然不同的保护作用,甚至会导致致命性脑炎。
季节性流感可在人与人之间高效传播,导致大量发病和死亡。罕见情况下,流感病毒的动物源菌株会传播给人类,从而有可能引发高死亡率的新型大流行。感染 H5N1 禽流感病毒的雪貂会迅速出现致命的全身疾病。我们研究了在感染雪貂时或在感染雪貂之前是否接触过两种季节性流感病毒株 H1N1 和 H3N2,研究了 H5N1 病毒在雪貂中的全身传播情况。先前感染过 H1N1 的雪貂可在 H5N1 挑战中存活,而先前感染过 H3N2 的雪貂则死于脑炎。然而,从致命性 H5N1 感染中得到保护的雪貂会发展出持续的小肠、肝脏或脾脏的低水平感染,为未来的病毒株重组提供了温床。为了设计有效的免疫接种和治疗方法,需要阐明先前感染特定季节性流感病毒株可预防致命性 H5N1 挑战的机制。