Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Animal Health Centre, Ministry of Agriculture and Food, Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2024 Feb 21;90(2):e0084223. doi: 10.1128/aem.00842-23. Epub 2024 Jan 23.
Diverse influenza A viruses (IAVs) circulate in wild birds, including highly pathogenic strains that infect poultry and humans. Consequently, surveillance of IAVs in wild birds is a cornerstone of agricultural biosecurity and pandemic preparedness. Surveillance is traditionally done by testing wild birds directly, but obtaining these specimens is labor intensive, detection rates can be low, and sampling is often biased toward certain avian species. As a result, local incursions of dangerous IAVs are rarely detected before outbreaks begin. Testing environmental specimens from wild bird habitats has been proposed as an alternative surveillance strategy. These specimens are thought to contain diverse IAVs deposited by a broad range of avian hosts, including species that are not typically sampled by surveillance programs. To enable this surveillance strategy, we developed a targeted genomic sequencing method for characterizing IAVs in these challenging environmental specimens. It combines custom hybridization probes, unique molecular index-based library construction, and purpose-built bioinformatic tools, allowing IAV genomic material to be enriched and analyzed with single-fragment resolution. We demonstrated our method on 90 sediment specimens from wetlands around Vancouver, Canada. We recovered 2,312 IAV genome fragments originating from all eight IAV genome segments. Eleven hemagglutinin subtypes and nine neuraminidase subtypes were detected, including H5, the current global surveillance priority. Our results demonstrate that targeted genomic sequencing of environmental specimens from wild bird habitats could become a valuable complement to avian influenza surveillance programs.IMPORTANCEIn this study, we developed genome sequencing tools for characterizing avian influenza viruses in sediment from wild bird habitats. These tools enable an environment-based approach to avian influenza surveillance. This could improve early detection of dangerous strains in local wild birds, allowing poultry producers to better protect their flocks and prevent human exposures to potential pandemic threats. Furthermore, we purposefully developed these methods to contend with viral genomic material that is diluted, fragmented, incomplete, and derived from multiple strains and hosts. These challenges are common to many environmental specimens, making these methods broadly applicable for genomic pathogen surveillance in diverse contexts.
多种甲型流感病毒(IAV)在野生鸟类中传播,包括感染家禽和人类的高致病性毒株。因此,对野生鸟类中的 IAV 进行监测是农业生物安全和大流行防范的基石。传统上,通过直接测试野生鸟类来进行监测,但获取这些样本劳动强度大,检测率可能较低,采样往往偏向某些鸟类物种。因此,在疫情爆发前,很少能检测到危险的 IAV 局部入侵。从野生鸟类栖息地的环境样本中进行检测已被提议作为一种替代监测策略。这些样本被认为包含了由广泛的鸟类宿主(包括通常不在监测计划中采样的物种)所沉积的多种 IAV。为了实现这一监测策略,我们开发了一种针对这些具有挑战性的环境样本中 IAV 特征的靶向基因组测序方法。它结合了定制的杂交探针、基于独特分子索引的文库构建和专门构建的生物信息学工具,使 IAV 基因组材料能够以单片段分辨率进行富集和分析。我们在加拿大温哥华周围的湿地的 90 个沉积物样本上验证了我们的方法。我们从所有八个 IAV 基因组片段中回收了 2312 个 IAV 基因组片段。检测到 11 种血凝素亚型和 9 种神经氨酸酶亚型,包括目前全球监测的重点 H5。我们的结果表明,从野生鸟类栖息地的环境样本中进行靶向基因组测序可以成为鸟类流感监测计划的有力补充。
在这项研究中,我们开发了用于从野生鸟类栖息地的沉积物中鉴定禽源流感病毒的基因组测序工具。这些工具使基于环境的鸟类流感监测成为可能。这可以提高对当地野生鸟类中危险菌株的早期检测,使家禽生产者能够更好地保护他们的禽类,并防止人类接触潜在的大流行威胁。此外,我们有针对性地开发了这些方法来应对稀释、碎片化、不完整的病毒基因组材料,以及源自多种菌株和宿主的材料。这些挑战在许多环境样本中都很常见,这使得这些方法在广泛的背景下广泛适用于基因组病原体监测。