IHAP, UMR1225, Université de Toulouse, INRAe, ENVT, Toulouse, France.
LADISERO, Parakou, Benin.
Emerg Microbes Infect. 2021 Dec;10(1):753-761. doi: 10.1080/22221751.2021.1908097.
Sub-Saharan Africa was historically considered an animal influenza cold spot, with only sporadic highly pathogenic H5 outbreaks detected over the last 20 years. However, in 2017, low pathogenic avian influenza A(H9N2) viruses were detected in poultry in Sub-Saharan Africa. Molecular, phylogenetic, and antigenic characterization of isolates from Benin, Togo, and Uganda showed that they belonged to the G1 lineage. Isolates from Benin and Togo clustered with viruses previously described in Western Africa, whereas viruses from Uganda were genetically distant and clustered with viruses from the Middle East. Viruses from Benin exhibited decreased cross-reactivity with those from Togo and Uganda, suggesting antigenic drift associated with reduced replication in Calu-3 cells. The viruses exhibited mammalian adaptation markers similar to those of the human strain A/Senegal/0243/2019 (H9N2). Therefore, viral genetic and antigenic surveillance in Africa is of paramount importance to detect further evolution or emergence of new zoonotic strains.
撒哈拉以南非洲在历史上被认为是动物流感的冷区,在过去的 20 年中仅偶尔检测到高致病性 H5 暴发。然而,2017 年在撒哈拉以南非洲的家禽中检测到低致病性禽流感 A(H9N2)病毒。来自贝宁、多哥和乌干达的分离株的分子、系统发育和抗原特征表明它们属于 G1 谱系。来自贝宁和多哥的分离株与以前在西非描述的病毒聚类,而来自乌干达的病毒在遗传上是不同的,与来自中东的病毒聚类。来自贝宁的病毒与来自多哥和乌干达的病毒的交叉反应性降低,表明与在 Calu-3 细胞中复制减少相关的抗原漂移。这些病毒表现出与人类菌株 A/Senegal/0243/2019(H9N2)相似的哺乳动物适应标记。因此,在非洲进行病毒遗传和抗原监测对于检测新的人畜共患病株的进一步进化或出现至关重要。