Literature detail

Phylogenetic evolution of swine-origin human influenza virus: a pandemic H1N1 2009.

A Kowalczyk1 I Markowska-Daniel
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. National Veterinary Research Institute, Department of Swine Diseases, Partyzantow 57, 24-100 Pulawy, Poland. [email protected]
PMID 21033564 2010 Pol J Vet Sci eng ppublish
PubMed Browse context

Article

Publication summary

The knowledge of the genome constellation in pandemic influenza A virus H1N1 2009 from different countries and different hosts is valuable for monitoring and understanding of the evolution and migration of these strains. The complete genome sequences of selected worldwide distributed influenza A viruses are publicly available and there have been few longitudinal genome studies of human, avian and swine influenza A viruses. All possible to download SIV sequences of influenza A viruses available at GISAID Platform (Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data) were analyzed firstly through the web servers of the Influenza Virus Resource in NCBI. Phylogenetic study of circulating human pandemic H1N1 virus indicated that the new variant possesses a distinctive evolutionary trait. There is no one way the pandemic H1N1 have acquired new genes from other distinguishable viruses circulating recently in local human, pig or domestic poultry populations from various geographic regions. The extensive genetic diversity among whole segments present in pandemic H1N1 genome suggests that multiple introduction of virus have taken place during the period 1999-2009. The initial interspecies transmission could have occurred in the long-range past and after it the reassortants steps lead to three lineages: classical SIV prevalent in the North America, avian-like SIV in Europe and avian-like related SIV in Asia. This analysis contributes to the evidence that pigs are not the only hosts playing the role of "mixing vessel", as it was suggested for many years.

Pandemics Phylogeny Animals Gene Expression Regulation, Viral Hemagglutinins Humans Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype Influenza, Human Neuraminidase Orthomyxoviridae Infections Swine Viral Proteins Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

The study suggests that influenza A pandemic H1N1 lineage evolved through interspecies transmission between avian and swine hosts, producing classical and avian-like swine influenza lineages.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

The initial interspecies transmission could have occurred in the long-range past and after it the reassortants steps lead to three lineages: classical SIV prevalent in the North America, avian-like SIV in Europe and avian-like related SIV in Asia.

Method
genome sequencing; phylogenetic study
Study design
phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Geographic raw
North America, Europe, Asia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Phylogenetic analysis of pandemic H1N1 2009 viruses revealed distinctive evolutionary patterns, with multiple introductions and reassortant lineages derived from classical and avian-like swine influenza viruses across regions.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Phylogenetic study of circulating human pandemic H1N1 virus indicated that the new variant possesses a distinctive evolutionary trait. The extensive genetic diversity among whole segments present in pandemic H1N1 genome suggests that multiple introduction of virus have taken place during the period 1999-2009. The initial interspecies transmission could have occurred in the long-range past and after it the reassortants steps lead to three lineages: classical SIV prevalent in the North America, avian-like SIV in Europe and avian-like related SIV in Asia.

Genes or proteins
whole genome; Hemagglutinins; Neuraminidase
Analysis methods
phylogenetic analysis; genome sequencing; comparative genomics
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Pandemic H1N1 2009 virus emerged through reassortant steps involving classical swine, avian-like European, and avian-like Asian lineages following interspecies transmission.

Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The initial interspecies transmission could have occurred in the long-range past and after it the reassortants steps lead to three lineages: classical SIV prevalent in the North America, avian-like SIV in Europe and avian-like related SIV in Asia.

Event type
reassortment
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Human pandemic influenza A(H1N1) 2009 virus originated from swine, representing a pig-to-human spillover event.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The title refers to 'swine-origin human influenza virus: a pandemic H1N1 2009', explicitly identifying a human influenza virus of swine origin, indicating transmission from pigs to humans.

Method
phylogenetic study; genome sequencing
Study design
phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-human