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The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications

Influenza A viruses are highly infectious respiratory pathogens that can infect many species. Birds are the reservoir for all known influenza A subtypes; and novel influenza viruses can emerge from birds and infect mammalian species including humans. Because swine are susceptible to infection with b...

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Autores principales: Ma, Wenjun, Kahn, Robert E, Richt, Juergen A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Library Publishing Media 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2702078/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19565018
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author Ma, Wenjun
Kahn, Robert E
Richt, Juergen A
author_facet Ma, Wenjun
Kahn, Robert E
Richt, Juergen A
author_sort Ma, Wenjun
collection PubMed
description Influenza A viruses are highly infectious respiratory pathogens that can infect many species. Birds are the reservoir for all known influenza A subtypes; and novel influenza viruses can emerge from birds and infect mammalian species including humans. Because swine are susceptible to infection with both avian and human influenza viruses, novel reassortant influenza viruses can be generated in this mammalian species by reassortment of influenza viral segments leading to the “mixing vessel” theory. There is no direct evidence that the reassortment events culminating in the 1918, 1957 or 1968 pandemic influenza viruses originated from pigs. Genetic reassortment among avian, human and/or swine influenza virus gene segments has occurred in pigs and some novel reassortant swine viruses have been transmitted to humans. Notably, novel reassortant H2N3 influenza viruses isolated from the US pigs, most likely infected with avian influenza viruses through surface water collected in ponds for cleaning barns and watering animals, had a similar genetic make-up to early isolates (1957) of the H2N2 human pandemic. These novel H2N3 swine viruses were able to cause disease in swine and mice and were infectious and highly transmissible in swine and ferrets without prior adaptation. The preceding example shows that pigs could transmit novel viruses from an avian reservoir to other mammalian species. Importantly, H2 viruses pose a substantial risk to humans because they have been absent from mammalian species since 1968 and people born after 1968 have little preexisting immunity to the H2 subtype. It is difficult to predict which virus will cause the next human pandemic and when that pandemic might begin. Importantly, the establishment and spread of a reassorted mammalian-adapted virus from pigs to humans could happen anywhere in the world. Therefore, both human and veterinary research needs to give more attention to potential cross-species transmission capacity of influenza A viruses.
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spelling pubmed-27020782009-06-29 The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications Ma, Wenjun Kahn, Robert E Richt, Juergen A J Mol Genet Med Review Article Influenza A viruses are highly infectious respiratory pathogens that can infect many species. Birds are the reservoir for all known influenza A subtypes; and novel influenza viruses can emerge from birds and infect mammalian species including humans. Because swine are susceptible to infection with both avian and human influenza viruses, novel reassortant influenza viruses can be generated in this mammalian species by reassortment of influenza viral segments leading to the “mixing vessel” theory. There is no direct evidence that the reassortment events culminating in the 1918, 1957 or 1968 pandemic influenza viruses originated from pigs. Genetic reassortment among avian, human and/or swine influenza virus gene segments has occurred in pigs and some novel reassortant swine viruses have been transmitted to humans. Notably, novel reassortant H2N3 influenza viruses isolated from the US pigs, most likely infected with avian influenza viruses through surface water collected in ponds for cleaning barns and watering animals, had a similar genetic make-up to early isolates (1957) of the H2N2 human pandemic. These novel H2N3 swine viruses were able to cause disease in swine and mice and were infectious and highly transmissible in swine and ferrets without prior adaptation. The preceding example shows that pigs could transmit novel viruses from an avian reservoir to other mammalian species. Importantly, H2 viruses pose a substantial risk to humans because they have been absent from mammalian species since 1968 and people born after 1968 have little preexisting immunity to the H2 subtype. It is difficult to predict which virus will cause the next human pandemic and when that pandemic might begin. Importantly, the establishment and spread of a reassorted mammalian-adapted virus from pigs to humans could happen anywhere in the world. Therefore, both human and veterinary research needs to give more attention to potential cross-species transmission capacity of influenza A viruses. Library Publishing Media 2008-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2702078/ /pubmed/19565018 Text en © The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/ This is an open access article, published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/). This license permits non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction of the article, provided the original work is appropriately acknowledged with correct citation details.
spellingShingle Review Article
Ma, Wenjun
Kahn, Robert E
Richt, Juergen A
The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications
title The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications
title_full The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications
title_fullStr The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications
title_full_unstemmed The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications
title_short The pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: Human and veterinary implications
title_sort pig as a mixing vessel for influenza viruses: human and veterinary implications
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2702078/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19565018
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