Literature detail

Molecular characterization of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza A viruses isolated from raccoon dogs in China.

Xian Qi1 Xihan Li Paul Rider Weixing Fan Hongwei Gu Longtao Xu Yonghua Yang Sangwei Lu Hua Wang Fenyong Liu
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Jiangsu CDC-Nanjing University Joint Institute of Virology, State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China.
PMID 19270752 2009 PLoS One eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

The highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 virus can infect a variety of animals and continually poses a threat to animal and human health. While many genotypes of H5N1 virus can be found in chicken, few are associated with the infection of mammals. Characterization of the genotypes of viral strains in animal populations is important to understand the distribution of different viral strains in various hosts. This also facilitates the surveillance and detection of possible emergence of highly pathogenic strains of specific genotypes from unknown hosts or hosts that have not been previously reported to carry these genotypes. Two H5N1 isolates were obtained from lung samples of two raccoon dogs that had died from respiratory disease in China. Pathogenicity experiments showed that the isolates were highly pathogenic to chicken. To characterize the genotypes of these viruses, their genomic sequences were determined and analyzed. The genetic contents of these isolates are virtually identical and they may come from the same progenitor virus. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the isolates were genetically closely related to genotype V H5N1 virus, which was first isolated in China in 2003, and were distinct from the dominant virus genotypes (e.g. genotype Z) of recent years. The isolates also contain a multibasic amino acid motif at their HA cleavage sites and have an E residue at position 627 of the PB2 protein similar to the previously-identified avian viruses. This is the first report that genotype V H5N1 virus is found to be associated with a mammalian host. Our results strongly suggest that genotype V H5N1 virus has the ability to cross species barriers to infect mammalian animals. These findings further highlight the risk that avian influenza H5N1 virus poses to mammals and humans, which may be infected by specific genotypes that are not known to infect these hosts.

Amino Acid Sequence Animals Chickens Genotype Hemagglutinins Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype Influenza in Birds Molecular Sequence Data Phylogeny Poultry Diseases Raccoon Dogs Respiratory Tract Infections Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Genotype V H5N1 avian influenza virus, originally associated with birds, infected raccoon dogs in China, demonstrating avian-to-mammal transmission.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Two H5N1 isolates were obtained from lung samples of two raccoon dogs that had died from respiratory disease in China. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the isolates were genetically closely related to genotype V H5N1 virus, which was first isolated in China in 2003. Our results strongly suggest that genotype V H5N1 virus has the ability to cross species barriers to infect mammalian animals.

Method
virus isolation; genomic sequencing; phylogenetic analysis; pathogenicity experiments
Study design
phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Geographic raw
China
Country inferred
China
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Genomic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis revealed that raccoon dog H5N1 isolates in China belong to genotype V, closely related to 2003 avian strains and distinct from recent genotypes.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

To characterize the genotypes of these viruses, their genomic sequences were determined and analyzed. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the isolates were genetically closely related to genotype V H5N1 virus, which was first isolated in China in 2003, and were distinct from the dominant virus genotypes (e.g. genotype Z) of recent years.

Genes or proteins
whole genome; HA; PB2
Analysis methods
genomic sequencing; phylogenetic analysis
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

H5N1 isolates derived from raccoon dogs were experimentally shown to be highly pathogenic to chickens.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Two H5N1 isolates were obtained from lung samples of two raccoon dogs that had died from respiratory disease in China. Pathogenicity experiments showed that the isolates were highly pathogenic to chicken.

Method
pathogenicity experiment; experimental infection
Sample type
lung
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Genotype V H5N1 viruses from raccoon dogs possess a multibasic HA cleavage site and PB2 E627, indicating avian-type molecular traits in mammalian infection.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The isolates also contain a multibasic amino acid motif at their HA cleavage sites and have an E residue at position 627 of the PB2 protein similar to the previously-identified avian viruses. This is the first report that genotype V H5N1 virus is found to be associated with a mammalian host.

Genes or proteins
HA; PB2
Mutations
PB2 E627
Mechanism types
pathogenicity; polymerase_activity; cross_species_adaptation