scholarly journals Rapid and sensitive detection of high pathogenicity Eurasian clade 2.3.4.4b avian influenza viruses in wild birds and poultry

2022 ◽  
pp. 114454
Author(s):  
Joe James ◽  
Amanda H. Seekings ◽  
Paul Skinner ◽  
Katie Purchase ◽  
Sahar Mahmood ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Vol 283 (1845) ◽  
pp. 20162159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah C. Hill ◽  
Ruth J. Manvell ◽  
Bodo Schulenburg ◽  
Wendy Shell ◽  
Paul S. Wikramaratna ◽  
...  

For viruses such as avian influenza, immunity within a host population can drive the emergence of new strains by selecting for viruses with novel antigens that avoid immune recognition. The accumulation of acquired immunity with age is hypothesized to affect how influenza viruses emerge and spread in species of different lifespans. Despite its importance for understanding the behaviour of avian influenza viruses, little is known about age-related accumulation of immunity in the virus's primary reservoir, wild birds. To address this, we studied the age structure of immune responses to avian influenza virus in a wild swan population ( Cygnus olor ), before and after the population experienced an outbreak of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza in 2008. We performed haemagglutination inhibition assays on sampled sera for five avian influenza strains and show that breadth of response accumulates with age. The observed age-related distribution of antibody responses to avian influenza strains may explain the age-dependent mortality observed during the highly pathogenic H5N1 outbreak. Age structures and species lifespan are probably important determinants of viral epidemiology and virulence in birds.


2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (s1) ◽  
pp. e178-e179
Author(s):  
Elisa Pérez-ramírez ◽  
Vanessa Rodríguez ◽  
Dagmar Sommer ◽  
Juan Manuel Blanco ◽  
Pelayo Acevedo ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pengxiang Chang ◽  
Joshua E. Sealy ◽  
Jean-Remy Sadeyen ◽  
Munir Iqbal

ABSTRACTAvian influenza viruses continue to evolve and acquire mutations that facilitate antigenic drift and virulence change. In 2017, low-pathogenicity H7N9 avian influenza viruses evolved to a high-pathogenicity phenotype in China. Comparative antigenic analysis of the low- and high-pathogenicity virus strains showed marked variability. In order to identify residues that may be linked to the antigenic change among the H7N9 viruses, we serially passaged the viruses in the presence of homologous ferret antiserum. Progeny viruses able to overcome the neutralizing capacity of the antiserum were sequenced. The analysis showed that the emergent immune escape viruses contained mutations A125T, A151T, and L217Q in the hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein as early as passage 5 and that these mutations persisted until passage 10. The results revealed that a single mutation, L217Q, in the HA of H7N9 virus led to 23- and 8-fold reductions in hemagglutination inhibition (HI) titer with ferret and chicken antisera, respectively. Further analysis showed that this change also contributed to antigenic differences between the low- and high-pathogenicity H7N9 viruses, thus playing a major role in their antigenic diversification. Therefore, evolutionary changes at amino acid position 217 in the H7N9 viruses can serve as a genetic marker for virus antigenic diversity during vaccine seed matching and selection. Thein vitroimmune escape mutant selection method used in this study could also aid in the prediction of emerging antigenic variants in naturally infected or immunized animals.IMPORTANCEAvian influenza H7N9 viruses circulating in poultry and wild birds continue to evolve and acquire important phenotypic changes. Mutations to the virus hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein can modulate virus antigenicity and facilitate virus escape from natural or vaccine-induced immunity. The focus of this study was to identify evolutionary markers in the HA of H7N9 that drive escape from antibody-based immunity. To achieve this, we propagated low-pathogenicity H7N9 virus in the presence of polyclonal antiserum derived from ferrets infected with the same strain of virus (homologous antiserum). This selection process was repeated 10 times. The HA gene sequences of viruses recovered after the fifth passage showed that the viruses readily acquired mutations at three different amino acid positions (A125T, A151T, and L217Q). Further functional analysis of these mutations confirmed that the mutation at residue 217 in the HA was responsible for mediating changes to the immunological properties of the H7N9 virus.


Viruses ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 915
Author(s):  
Butler ◽  
Middleton ◽  
Haining ◽  
Layton ◽  
Rockman ◽  
...  

Circulating avian influenza viruses pose a significant threat, with human infections occurring infrequently but with potentially severe consequences. To examine the dynamics and locale of the adaptation process of avian influenza viruses when introduced to a mammalian host, we infected ferrets with H5N1 viruses. As expected, all ferrets infected with the human H5N1 isolate A/Vietnam/1203/2004 showed severe disease and virus replication outside the respiratory tract in multiple organs including the brain. In contrast infection of ferrets with the avian H5N1 virus A/Chicken/Laos/Xaythiani26/2006 showed a different collective pattern of infection; many ferrets developed and cleared a mild respiratory infection but a subset (25–50%), showed extended replication in the upper respiratory tract and developed infection in distal sites. Virus from these severely infected ferrets was commonly found in tissues that included liver and small intestine. In most instances the virus had acquired the common virulence substitution PB2 E627K but, in one case, a previously unidentified combination of two amino acid substitutions at PB2 S489P and NP V408I, which enhanced polymerase activity, was found. We noted that virus with high pathogenicity adaptations could be dominant in an extra-respiratory site without being equally represented in the nasal wash. Further ferret passage of these mutated viruses resulted in high pathogenicity in all ferrets. These findings illustrate the remarkable ability of avian influenza viruses that avoid clearance in the respiratory tract, to mutate towards a high pathogenicity phenotype during just a single passage in ferrets and also indicate a window of less than 5 days in which treatment may curtail systemic infection.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Borys Stegniy ◽  
Denys Muzyka ◽  
Mary Pantin-Jackwood ◽  
Oleksandr Rula ◽  
Anton Stegniy ◽  
...  

The abstract is devoted to monitoring studies of circulation of the AIV subtypes H5 and H7 in wild waterfowl and shorebirds around the Azov-Black Sea in Ukraine


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