Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
mSphere. 2023 Aug 24;8(4):e0003923. doi: 10.1128/msphere.00039-23. Epub 2023 May 31.
Secondary infection with has contributed significantly to morbidity and mortality during multiple influenza virus pandemics and remains a common threat today. During a concurrent infection, both pathogens can influence the transmission of each other, but the mechanisms behind this are unclear. In this study, condensation air sampling and cyclone bioaerosol sampling were performed using ferrets first infected with the 2009 H1N1 pandemic influenza virus (H1N1pdm09) and secondarily infected with strain D39 (Spn). We detected viable pathogens and microbial nucleic acid in expelled aerosols from co-infected ferrets, suggesting that these microbes could be present in the same respiratory expulsions. To assess whether microbial communities impact pathogen stability within an expelled droplet, we performed experiments measuring viral and bacterial persistence in 1 µL droplets. We observed that H1N1pdm09 stability was unchanged in the presence of Spn. Further, Spn stability was moderately increased in the presence of H1N1pdm09, although the degree of stabilization differed between airway surface liquid collected from individual patient cultures. These findings are the first to collect both pathogens from the air and in doing so, they provide insight into the interplay between these pathogens and their hosts.IMPORTANCEThe impact of microbial communities on transmission fitness and environmental persistence is under-studied. Environmental stability of microbes is crucial to identifying transmission risks and mitigation strategies, such as removal of contaminated aerosols and decontamination of surfaces. Co-infection with is very common during influenza virus infection, but little work has been done to understand whether alters stability of influenza virus, or vice versa, in a relevant system. Here, we demonstrate that influenza virus and are expelled by co-infected hosts. Our stability assays did not reveal any impact of on influenza virus stability, but did show a trend towards increased stability of in the presence of influenza viruses. Future work characterizing environmental persistence of viruses and bacteria should include microbially complex solutions to better mimic physiologically relevant conditions.
继发感染 对多次流感大流行期间的发病率和死亡率有重大影响,如今仍是一个常见威胁。在并发感染中,两种病原体可以相互影响传播,但背后的机制尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们使用首先感染 2009 年 H1N1 大流行流感病毒(H1N1pdm09)然后再次感染 D39 株(Spn)的雪貂进行了冷凝空气采样和旋风生物气溶胶采样。我们在混合感染的雪貂呼出的气溶胶中检测到了有活力的病原体和微生物核酸,这表明这些微生物可能存在于同一呼吸道飞沫中。为了评估微生物群落是否会影响呼出飞沫中病原体的稳定性,我们进行了实验以测量 1 µL 飞沫中病毒和细菌的持久性。我们观察到,Spn 的存在并未改变 H1N1pdm09 的稳定性。此外,Spn 的存在适度增加了 H1N1pdm09 的稳定性,尽管从个体患者培养物中收集的气道表面液体之间的稳定程度有所不同。这些发现首次从空气中同时收集到这两种病原体,并提供了有关这些病原体与其宿主相互作用的见解。
重要性
微生物群落对传播适应性和环境持久性的影响尚未得到充分研究。微生物的环境稳定性对于识别传播风险和减轻策略至关重要,例如去除污染的气溶胶和表面去污。在流感病毒感染期间,继发感染 非常常见,但很少有工作来了解 是否会改变流感病毒的稳定性,或者反之亦然,在相关系统中。在这里,我们证明了感染的宿主会同时排出流感病毒和 。我们的稳定性测定没有发现 对流感病毒稳定性的任何影响,但确实显示出在流感病毒存在的情况下 稳定性增加的趋势。未来对病毒和细菌环境持久性的特征描述应包括微生物更复杂的解决方案,以更好地模拟生理相关条件。