Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maryland, College Park, and Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, Maryland Campus, College Park, Maryland, USA
Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maryland, College Park, and Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, Maryland Campus, College Park, Maryland, USA.
J Virol. 2014 Jun;88(12):6623-35. doi: 10.1128/JVI.02765-13. Epub 2014 Apr 2.
Avian H7 influenza viruses are recognized as potential pandemic viruses, as personnel often become infected during poultry outbreaks. H7 infections in humans typically cause mild conjunctivitis; however, the H7N9 outbreak in the spring of 2013 has resulted in severe respiratory disease. To date, no H7 viruses have acquired the ability for sustained transmission among humans. Airborne transmission is considered a requirement for the emergence of pandemic influenza, and advanced knowledge of the molecular changes or signature required for transmission would allow early identification of pandemic vaccine seed stocks, screening and stockpiling of antiviral compounds, and eradication efforts focused on flocks harboring threatening viruses. Thus, we sought to determine if a highly pathogenic influenza A H7N1 (A/H7N1) virus with no history of human infection could become capable of airborne transmission among ferrets. We show that after 10 serial passages, A/H7N1 developed the ability to be transmitted to cohoused and airborne contact ferrets. Four amino acid mutations (PB2 T81I, NP V284M, and M1 R95K and Q211K) in the internal genes and a minimal amino acid mutation (K/R313R) in the stalk region of the hemagglutinin protein were associated with airborne transmission. Furthermore, transmission was not associated with loss of virulence. These findings highlight the importance of the internal genes in host adaptation and suggest that natural isolates carrying these mutations be further evaluated. Our results demonstrate that a highly pathogenic avian H7 virus can become capable of airborne transmission in a mammalian host, and they support ongoing surveillance and pandemic H7 vaccine development.
The major findings of this report are that a highly pathogenic strain of H7N1 avian influenza virus can be adapted to become capable of airborne transmission in mammals without mutations altering receptor specificity. Changes in receptor specificity have been shown to play a role in the ability of avian influenza viruses to cross the species barrier, and these changes are assumed to be essential. The work reported here challenges this paradigm, at least for the influenza viruses of the H7 subtype, which have recently become the focus of major attention, as they have crossed to humans.
禽流感 H7 病毒被认为是潜在的大流行病毒,因为在禽类疫情爆发期间,人员经常被感染。人类感染 H7 通常会引起轻度结膜炎;然而,2013 年春季的 H7N9 疫情导致了严重的呼吸道疾病。迄今为止,还没有 H7 病毒获得在人与人之间持续传播的能力。空气传播被认为是流感大流行出现的一个要求,对传播所需的分子变化或特征的深入了解将允许早期识别大流行疫苗种子库存,筛选和储备抗病毒化合物,并集中精力消灭携带威胁病毒的禽类。因此,我们试图确定一种没有人类感染史的高致病性禽流感 H7N1(A/H7N1)病毒是否能够在雪貂之间通过空气传播。我们表明,在 10 次连续传代后,A/H7N1 病毒能够传播给同居和空气接触的雪貂。内部基因中的 4 个氨基酸突变(PB2 T81I、NP V284M 和 M1 R95K 和 Q211K)和血凝蛋白茎部区域的一个最小氨基酸突变(K/R313R)与空气传播有关。此外,传播与毒力丧失无关。这些发现强调了内部基因在宿主适应中的重要性,并表明应进一步评估携带这些突变的天然分离株。我们的研究结果表明,高致病性禽流感 H7 病毒可以在哺乳动物宿主中适应空气传播,这支持了正在进行的监测和大流行 H7 疫苗开发。
本报告的主要发现是,高致病性 H7N1 禽流感病毒株在不改变受体特异性的突变的情况下,可以适应在哺乳动物中进行空气传播。受体特异性的改变已被证明在禽流感病毒跨越物种屏障的能力中起作用,并且这些改变被认为是必不可少的。这里报道的工作挑战了这一模式,至少对于 H7 亚型的流感病毒是如此,因为它们最近已经成为人类关注的焦点。