Virus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Ames, Iowa, United States of America.
Department of Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2023 Jul 27;19(7):e1011476. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1011476. eCollection 2023 Jul.
The 2009 H1N1 pandemic (pdm09) lineage of influenza A virus (IAV) crosses interspecies barriers with frequent human-to-swine spillovers each year. These spillovers reassort and drift within swine populations, leading to genetically and antigenically novel IAV that represent a zoonotic threat. We quantified interspecies transmission of the pdm09 lineage, persistence in swine, and identified how evolution in swine impacted zoonotic risk. Human and swine pdm09 case counts between 2010 and 2020 were correlated and human pdm09 burden and circulation directly impacted the detection of pdm09 in pigs. However, there was a relative absence of pdm09 circulation in humans during the 2020-21 season that was not reflected in swine. During the 2020-21 season, most swine pdm09 detections originated from human-to-swine spillovers from the 2018-19 and 2019-20 seasons that persisted in swine. We identified contemporary swine pdm09 representatives of each persistent spillover and quantified cross-reactivity between human seasonal H1 vaccine strains and the swine strains using a panel of monovalent ferret antisera in hemagglutination inhibition (HI) assays. The swine pdm09s had variable antigenic reactivity to vaccine antisera, but each swine pdm09 clade exhibited significant reduction in cross-reactivity to one or more of the human seasonal vaccine strains. Further supporting zoonotic risk, we showed phylogenetic evidence for 17 swine-to-human transmission events of pdm09 from 2010 to 2021, 11 of which were not previously classified as variants, with each of the zoonotic cases associated with persistent circulation of pdm09 in pigs. These data demonstrate that reverse-zoonoses and evolution of pdm09 in swine results in viruses that are capable of zoonotic transmission and represent a potential pandemic threat.
2009 年 H1N1 大流行(pdm09)流感病毒(IAV)谱系每年都会频繁地从人类传播到猪身上。这些溢出物在猪群中重组和漂移,导致具有遗传和抗原性的新型 IAV,这代表了一种人畜共患病的威胁。我们量化了 pdm09 谱系的种间传播、在猪中的持久性,并确定了猪中进化如何影响人畜共患病的风险。2010 年至 2020 年期间,人类和猪 pdm09 病例数呈正相关,人类 pdm09 负担和传播直接影响了猪中 pdm09 的检测。然而,在 2020-21 季节,人类中 pdm09 的传播相对较少,而猪中并没有反映出来。在 2020-21 季节,大多数猪 pdm09 的检测源自 2018-19 和 2019-20 季节从人类传播到猪的持续存在的溢出物。我们确定了每个持续溢出物的当代猪 pdm09 代表,并使用血凝抑制(HI)试验中的单克隆雪貂抗血清对人类季节性 H1 疫苗株和猪株之间的交叉反应性进行了定量。猪 pdm09 对疫苗抗血清的抗原反应性不同,但每个猪 pdm09 分支对一种或多种人类季节性疫苗株的交叉反应性均显著降低。进一步支持人畜共患病风险的是,我们展示了 2010 年至 2021 年期间 17 起猪向人类传播 pdm09 的系统发育证据,其中 11 起以前未被归类为变体,每起人畜共患病病例都与猪中 pdm09 的持续传播有关。这些数据表明,人畜共患病和猪 pdm09 的进化导致了具有人畜共患病传播能力的病毒,这代表了潜在的大流行威胁。