Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine Tufts University, North Grafton, MA, USA.
Methods Mol Biol. 2020;2123:429-450. doi: 10.1007/978-1-0716-0346-8_33.
Influenza A infection has been detected in marine mammals going back to 1975, with additional unconfirmed outbreaks as far back as 1931. Over the past forty years, infectious virus has been recovered on ten separate occasions from both pinnipeds (harbor seal, elephant seal, and Caspian seal) and cetaceans (striped whale and pilot whale). Recovered viruses have spanned a range of subtypes (H1, H3, H4, H7, H10, and H13) and, in all but H1N1, show strong evidence for deriving directly from avian sources. To date, there have been five unusual mortality events directly attributed to influenza A virus; these have primarily occurred in harbor seals in the Northeastern United States, with the most recent occurring in harbor seals in the North Sea.There are numerous additional reports wherein influenza A virus has indirectly been identified in marine mammals; these include serosurveillance efforts that have detected influenza A- and B-specific antibodies in marine mammals spanning the globe and the detection of viral RNA in both active and opportunistic surveillance in the Northwest Atlantic. For viral detection and recovery, nasal, rectal, and conjunctival swabs have been employed in pinnipeds, while blowhole, nasal, and rectal swabs have been employed in cetaceans. In the case of deceased animals, virus has also been detected in tissue. Surveillance has historically been somewhat limited, relying largely upon opportunistic sampling of stranded or bycaught animals and primarily occurring in response to a mortality event. A handful of active surveillance projects have shown that influenza may be more endemic in marine mammals than previously appreciated, though live virus is difficult to recover. Surveillance efforts are hindered by permitting and logistical challenges, the absence of reagents and methodology optimized for nonavian wild hosts, and low concentration of virus recovered from asymptomatic animals. Despite these challenges, a growing body of evidence suggests that marine mammals are an important wild reservoir of influenza and may contribute to mammalian adaptation of avian variants.
自 1975 年以来,已在海洋哺乳动物中检测到甲型流感感染,而更早的未确诊暴发则可追溯到 1931 年。在过去的四十年中,已从鳍足类动物(港海豹、象海豹和里海海豹)和鲸目动物(条纹海豚和领航鲸)中分别在十次不同的场合中分离出了传染性病毒。回收的病毒跨越了多种亚型(H1、H3、H4、H7、H10 和 H13),并且除 H1N1 外,都强烈表明其直接来源于禽类。迄今为止,有五起异常死亡率事件直接归因于甲型流感病毒;这些主要发生在美国东北部的港海豹中,最近一起发生在北海的港海豹中。还有许多其他报告间接表明了甲型流感病毒在海洋哺乳动物中的存在;这些报告包括血清学监测工作,该工作在全球范围内检测到了海洋哺乳动物中的甲型和乙型流感特异性抗体,以及在西北大西洋的主动和机会性监测中检测到了病毒 RNA。为了进行病毒检测和回收,已在鳍足类动物中使用了鼻拭子、直肠拭子和结膜拭子,而在鲸目动物中则使用了喷气孔拭子、鼻拭子和直肠拭子。对于死亡动物,还在组织中检测到了病毒。监测工作在历史上一直受到限制,主要依赖于对搁浅或误捕动物的机会性采样,并且主要是在发生死亡率事件时才进行。少数主动监测项目表明,流感在海洋哺乳动物中的流行程度可能比以前认为的更为普遍,尽管难以从无症状动物中回收活病毒。监测工作受到许可和后勤方面的挑战、缺乏针对非禽野生动物宿主优化的试剂和方法以及从无症状动物中回收的病毒浓度低等因素的阻碍。尽管存在这些挑战,但越来越多的证据表明,海洋哺乳动物是流感的一个重要野生动物宿主,并且可能有助于哺乳动物对禽变体的适应。