Genetic and biological characterization of H9N2 avian influenza viruses isolated from swine in China.

IF 2.6 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Yuzhong Zhao, Chang Liu, Yingchao Li, Yu Wang, Bingyu Hou, Hongyan Gao, Zhong Liu, Xiaotong Wu, Man Lu, Yang Shen, Pingping Yang, Hongjie Yuan, Yanmeng Hou, Yihong Xiao
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Abstract

Background: H9N2 avian influenza virus (AIV) has been circulating in poultry in China for decades and are undergoing adaptation to mammals, posing potential pandemic risks. To investigate the prevalence of H9N2 AIVs in swine, we conducted surveillance in Shandong Province from 2021 to 2023.

Results: Two H9N2 influenza virus strains, A/swine/Shandong/417/2021(Sw/SD/417/21) and A/swine/Shandong/662/2022 (Sw/SD/662/22), were successfully isolated from swine and genetically characterized. Phylogenetic analyses showed that both isolates were reassortants containing gene segments from multiple H9N2 AIV lineages and closely related to currently circulating H9N2 AIV. Key molecular marker analysis revealed that both isolates carried mammalian-adaptive residues in the HA receptor-binding sites (183 N, 190 V, 226 L), a novel HA cleavage site variant (PSKSSRGL), PB2 mutations (A588V, E627V), and the M2 S31N substitution, suggesting potential adaptation to mammalian hosts and resistance to adamantane antivirals. Mice infection experiments demonstrated efficient viral replication in the respiratory tract, particularly in the lungs, but only mild histopathological changes were observed, with no significant weight loss or mortality, indicating low pathogenicity in mice. Serological surveillance of 3,172 swine serum samples showed a low prevalence of H9N2 influenza virus infection (0.44%), with positive samples sporadically distributed across regions and years.

Conclusion: In summary, although H9N2 AIV infection in swine is rare and generally mild, the presence of mammalian-adaptive markers and reassortant genomes highlights the potential risk of cross-species transmission and subclinical adaptation. Continuous avian-swine-human influenza surveillance is therefore essential to mitigate the potential threat posed by H9N2 AIV.

中国猪源H9N2禽流感病毒的遗传和生物学特性
背景:H9N2禽流感病毒(AIV)已在中国家禽中流行数十年,并正在适应哺乳动物,具有潜在的大流行风险。为了调查猪中H9N2 aiv的流行情况,我们于2021 - 2023年在山东省进行了监测。结果:成功分离到A/swine/Shandong/417/2021(Sw/SD/417/21)和A/swine/Shandong/662/2022 (Sw/SD/662/22)两株H9N2流感病毒,并对其进行了遗传鉴定。系统发育分析表明,这两株分离株均含有来自多个H9N2 AIV谱系的基因片段,与当前流行的H9N2 AIV密切相关。关键分子标记分析显示,这两个分离株在HA受体结合位点(183 N、190 V、226 L)、HA切割位点变异(PSKSSRGL)、PB2突变(A588V、E627V)和M2 S31N取代位点上都携带哺乳动物适应性残基,表明它们可能适应哺乳动物宿主,并对金刚烷类抗病毒药物产生抗性。小鼠感染实验表明,病毒在呼吸道,特别是在肺部进行了有效的复制,但仅观察到轻微的组织病理学改变,没有明显的体重减轻或死亡率,表明小鼠致病性低。对3172份猪血清的血清学监测显示,H9N2流感病毒感染的流行率较低(0.44%),阳性样本在不同地区和年份呈零星分布。结论:尽管H9N2 AIV在猪中的感染是罕见的,通常是轻微的,但哺乳动物适应标记和重组基因组的存在突出了跨物种传播和亚临床适应的潜在风险。因此,持续的禽-猪-人流感监测对于减轻H9N2 AIV造成的潜在威胁至关重要。
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来源期刊
BMC Veterinary Research
BMC Veterinary Research VETERINARY SCIENCES-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.80%
发文量
420
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Veterinary Research is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of veterinary science and medicine, including the epidemiology, diagnosis, prevention and treatment of medical conditions of domestic, companion, farm and wild animals, as well as the biomedical processes that underlie their health.
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