New study shows small changes make the subtype more transmissible
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Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

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Pandemic planners may have been looking at the wrong avian
influenza virus as the source of the next worldwide flu epidemic. A type of
avian flu virus known as H9N2 could become transmissible in humans with just a
few changes, a new study shows.
“The H9 may be a silent virus that doesn’t get noticed until
it’s too late,” says Daniel Perez, a virologist at the University
of Maryland, College Park.
Perez and his colleagues analyzed the pandemic potential of
the H9 flu viruses in ferrets, a model for human disease transmission. The team
found that changing a single chemical building block in the hemagglutinin
protein that helps the virus latch onto cells can make the virus more
transmissible in ferrets. Mixing the avian virus’s genes with those from human
flu viruses also increases transmission and may make the virus more virulent,
the researchers report online August 13 in PLoS
ONE.
Though the virus did not become airborne in ferrets, it may
have the potential to do so in the future.
Much attention has been focused on the H5N1 bird flu virus
and H7 avian flu viruses as candidates for the next pandemic, says Chang-Won
Lee, a molecular virologist at the Ohio
State University
in Wooster. But
there is plenty of circumstantial evidence that the H9 viruses could also cause
a future pandemic, Lee says.
H9 avian influenza is
widespread among birds in Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.
It doesn’t make birds sick, so it often goes unnoticed. Some people and pigs
have also been infected, but the virus causes only a mild illness in people
and, so far, has not been known to spread from person to person. But Perez’s
results could indicate that the H9 viruses may begin spreading among people
with just minor changes.
“Transmission is really the cardinal property a virus has to
have in order to cause a pandemic in humans,” says Peter Palese, a virologist
at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New
York City. Still airborne transmission is a condition
that would be necessary for a human pandemic, so the new results are a
“half-full, half-empty glass,” Palese says.
Even if the H9 viruses do acquire the ability to spread in
people, at first the infection is likely to cause minor illness. “You’re going
to have a bunch of people who don’t feel very well, as opposed to dropping off
the face of the Earth,” says Raymond Pickles, a cell biologist at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. But the new data indicate that
if the H9 viruses mix with other human viruses, as commonly happens in nature,
it could become more potent.
While many pandemic planners put the deadly H5N1 virus at
the top of their list of concerns, Robert G. Webster, a leading influenza
researcher at St. Jude Children’s Research
Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.,
says H9N2 tops his “influenza hit list.”
The H9 virus is an “influenza sleeper,” Webster says. “It
could cause many more problems than we realize.”
Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells
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