Document detail
ID

oai:HAL:pasteur-03221720v1

Topic
Influenza H5N1 avian transmission poultry ducks ferrets Cambodia MESH: Animals MESH: Cambodia MESH: Phylogeny MESH: Species Specificity MESH: Virulence MESH: Chickens MESH: Ducks MESH: Ferrets MESH: Humans MESH: Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subt... MESH: Influenza in Birds MESH: Influenza, Human MESH: Orthomyxoviridae Infections [SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/...
Author
Horwood, Paul, F Fabrizio, Thomas Horm, Srey, Viseth Metlin, Artem Ros, Sopheaktra Tok, Songha Jeevan, Trushar Seiler, Patrick Y, Phalla Rith, Sareth Suttie, Annika Buchy, Philippe Karlsson, Erik, A Webby, Richard Dussart, Philippe
Langue
en
Editor

HAL CCSD;Earliest : Springer-Nature ; Latest : Taylor & Francis

Category

sciences: life sciences

Year

2020

listing date

12/8/2023

Keywords
clade differences circulated ferrets virulence ducks influenza 1c infections transmission mesh viruses humans virus
Metrics

Abstract

International audience; Influenza A/H5N1 has circulated in Asia since 2003 and is now enzootic in many countries in that region.

In Cambodia, the virus has circulated since 2004 and has intermittently infected humans.

During this period, we have noted differences in the rate of infections in humans, potentially associated with the circulation of different viral clades.

In particular, a reassortant clade 1.1.2 virus emerged in early 2013 and was associated with a dramatic increase in infections of humans (34 cases) until it was replaced by a clade 2.3.2.1c virus in early 2014.

In contrast, only one infection of a human has been reported in the 6 years since the clade 2.3.2.1c virus became the dominant circulating virus.

We selected three viruses to represent the main viral clades that have circulated in Cambodia (clade 1.1.2, clade 1.1.2 reassortant, and clade 2.3.2.1c), and we conducted experiments to assess the virulence and transmissibility of these viruses in avian (chicken, duck) and mammalian (ferret) models.

Our results suggest that the clade 2.3.2.1c virus is more "avian-like," with high virulence in both ducks and chickens, but there is no evidence of aerosol transmission of the virus from ducks to ferrets.

In contrast, the two clade 1 viruses were less virulent in experimentally infected and contact ducks.

However, evidence of chicken-to-ferret aerosol transmission was observed for both clade 1 viruses.

The transmission experiments provide insights into clade-level differences that might explain the variation in A/H5N1 infections of humans observed in Cambodia and other settings.

Horwood, Paul, F,Fabrizio, Thomas,Horm, Srey, Viseth,Metlin, Artem,Ros, Sopheaktra,Tok, Songha,Jeevan, Trushar,Seiler, Patrick,Y, Phalla,Rith, Sareth,Suttie, Annika,Buchy, Philippe,Karlsson, Erik, A,Webby, Richard,Dussart, Philippe, 2020, Transmission experiments support clade-level differences in the transmission and pathogenicity of Cambodian influenza A/H5N1 viruses, HAL CCSD;Earliest : Springer-Nature ; Latest : Taylor & Francis

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