2018-2019 年人类季节性 H3N2 甲型流感病毒溢出到猪体内,并在猪群中证实病毒传播并不持续。

IF 4 2区 医学 Q2 VIROLOGY
Journal of Virology Pub Date : 2024-12-17 Epub Date: 2024-11-11 DOI:10.1128/jvi.00087-24
Joshua D Powell, Megan N Thomas, Tavis K Anderson, Michael A Zeller, Phillip C Gauger, Amy L Vincent Baker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019年,美国密歇根州、伊利诺伊州和弗吉尼亚州商业猪场的猪群中四次检测到人类季节性H3支系3C3a甲型流感病毒(IAV)。为了评估这种病毒外溢到猪群中的相对风险,研究人员进行了全基因组测序和系统发育特征分析,结果显示所有八个病毒基因片段都与 2018-2019 年 H3N2 人类季节性 IAV 密切相关。接下来,利用具有代表性的 A/SWINE/Virginia/A02478738/2018(H3N2)(SW/VA/19)分离株进行了一系列体外病毒动力学、受体结合和抗原表征研究。病毒复制动力学研究表明,SW/VA/19 的复制曲线效率低于所有 10 种已测试的猪 H3N2 病毒,但高于 3 种人类 H3N2 毒株。SW/VA/19 在猪细胞中的连续传代实验没有增加病毒的复制,但 HA 第 9 位和第 159 位氨基酸发生了变化。在猪传播研究中,野生型 SW/VA/19 在鼻腔分泌物中脱落,并传播给所有间接接触的猪,而来自同一 3C3a 支系的人类季节性毒株 A/Switzerland/9715293/2013(H3N2) 却未能传播。SW/VA/19 引发的肺部宏观和微观病变极少。总之,这些研究结果表明,这些类似人类季节性 H3N2 3C3a 病毒的病毒在猪体内脱落和传播并不需要与猪 IAV 地方性基因片段重配。随后一段时间在美国猪群中的有限检测结果表明,一种尚未被发现的限制因素可能会限制这些病毒在美国猪群中的传播。 重要意义种间人猪 IAV 传播在全球范围内时有发生,并导致猪群中 IAV 多样性的增加。我们提供的数据表明,来自 2018-2019 年人对猪传播事件的猪分离株在受挑战猪和接触猪中传播多日。通过生物信息学、分子和动物实验方法来描述这种传播,这些发现为动物健康实践和疫苗决策提供了更好的信息。由于美国的所有人类季节性 H3N2 病毒以前都未被发现可在猪中传播(即反向人畜共患病),这些发现揭示了向猪传播的种间障碍可能不需要对所有人类季节性 H3N2 病毒进行重大改变,尽管在猪群中持续传播可能需要额外的改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
2018-2019 human seasonal H3N2 influenza A virus spillovers into swine with demonstrated virus transmission in pigs were not sustained in the pig population.

Human seasonal H3 clade 3C3a influenza A viruses (IAV) were detected four times in U.S. pigs from commercial swine farms in Michigan, Illinois, and Virginia in 2019. To evaluate the relative risk of this spillover to the pig population, whole genome sequencing and phylogenetic characterization were conducted, and the results revealed that all eight viral gene segments were closely related to 2018-2019 H3N2 human seasonal IAV. Next, a series of in vitro viral kinetics, receptor binding, and antigenic characterization studies were performed using a representative A/swine/Virginia/A02478738/2018(H3N2) (SW/VA/19) isolate. Viral replication kinetic studies of SW/VA/19 demonstrated less efficient replication curves than all 10 swine H3N2 viruses tested but higher than three human H3N2 strains. Serial passaging experiments of SW/VA/19 in swine cells did not increase virus replication, but changes at HA amino acid positions 9 and 159 occurred. In swine transmission studies, wild-type SW/VA/19 was shed in nasal secretions and transmitted to all indirect contact pigs, whereas the human seasonal strain A/Switzerland/9715293/2013(H3N2) from the same 3C3a clade failed to transmit. SW/VA/19 induced minimal macroscopic and microscopic lung lesions. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that these human seasonal H3N2 3C3a-like viruses did not require reassortment with endemic swine IAV gene segments for virus shedding and transmission in pigs. Limited detections in the U.S. pig population in the subsequent period of time suggest a yet-unknown restriction factor likely limiting the spread of these viruses in the U.S. pig population.IMPORTANCEInterspecies human-to-swine IAV transmission occurs globally and contributes to increased IAV diversity in pig populations. We present data that a swine isolate from a 2018-2019 human-to-swine transmission event was shed for multiple days in challenged and contact pigs. By characterizing this introduction through bioinformatic, molecular, and animal experimental approaches, these findings better inform animal health practices and vaccine decision-making. Since wholly human seasonal H3N2 viruses in the United States were not previously identified as being transmissible in pigs (i.e., reverse zoonosis), these findings reveal that the interspecies barriers for transmission to pigs may not require significant changes to all human seasonal H3N2, although additional changes may be required for sustained transmission in swine populations.

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来源期刊
Journal of Virology
Journal of Virology 医学-病毒学
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
7.40%
发文量
906
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Virology (JVI) explores the nature of the viruses of animals, archaea, bacteria, fungi, plants, and protozoa. We welcome papers on virion structure and assembly, viral genome replication and regulation of gene expression, genetic diversity and evolution, virus-cell interactions, cellular responses to infection, transformation and oncogenesis, gene delivery, viral pathogenesis and immunity, and vaccines and antiviral agents.
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