Origin and diversity of novel avian influenza A H7N9 viruses causing human infection: phylogenetic, structural, and coalescent analyses.
Di Liu1
Weifeng Shi
Yi Shi
Dayan Wang
Haixia Xiao
Wei Li
Yuhai Bi
Ying Wu
Xianbin Li
Jinghua Yan
Wenjun Liu
Guoping Zhao
Weizhong Yang
Yu Wang
Juncai Ma
Yuelong Shu
Fumin Lei
George F Gao
Affiliations1 institutions
CAS Key Laboratory of Pathogenic Microbiology and Immunology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
On March 30, 2013, a novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus that infects human beings was identified. This virus had been detected in six provinces and municipal cities in China as of April 18, 2013. We correlated genomic sequences from avian influenza viruses with ecological information and did phylogenetic and coalescent analyses to extrapolate the potential origins of the virus and possible routes of reassortment events. We downloaded H7N9 virus genome sequences from the Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data (GISAID) database and public sequences used from the Influenza Virus Resource. We constructed phylogenetic trees and did 1000 bootstrap replicates for each tree. Two rounds of phylogenetic analyses were done. We used at least 100 closely related sequences for each gene to infer the overall topology, removed suspicious sequences from the trees, and focused on the closest clades to the novel H7N9 viruses. We compared our tree topologies with those from a bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling trees (BEAST) analysis. We used the bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo method to jointly estimate phylogenies, divergence times, and other evolutionary parameters for all eight gene fragments. We used sequence alignment and homology-modelling methods to study specific mutations regarding phenotypes, specifically addressing the human receptor binding properties. The novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus originated from multiple reassortment events. The HA gene might have originated from avian influenza viruses of duck origin, and the NA gene might have transferred from migratory birds infected with avian influenza viruses along the east Asian flyway. The six internal genes of this virus probably originated from two different groups of H9N2 avian influenza viruses, which were isolated from chickens. Detailed analyses also showed that ducks and chickens probably acted as the intermediate hosts leading to the emergence of this virulent H7N9 virus. Genotypic and potential phenotypic differences imply that the isolates causing this outbreak form two separate subclades. The novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus might have evolved from at least four origins. Diversity among isolates implies that the H7N9 virus has evolved into at least two different lineages. Unknown intermediate hosts involved might be implicated, extensive global surveillance is needed, and domestic-poultry-to-person transmission should be closely watched in the future. China Ministry of Science and Technology Project 973, National Natural Science Foundation of China, China Health and Family Planning Commission, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
AnimalsBiological EvolutionDucksGenome, ViralInfluenza A virusInfluenza in BirdsMarkov ChainsPhenotypePhylogenyPoultrySequence AlignmentSequence Homology
Structured evidence records
Evidence records
5 total
Cross Species Transmission1 records
Cross Species TransmissionExtraction confidence 0.85
Key finding
Phylogenetic evidence supports cross-species transmission among avian hosts, with duck-origin and migratory bird-origin influenza viruses contributing genes to H7N9 that circulated through chickens as intermediate hosts.
The HA gene might have originated from avian influenza viruses of duck origin, and the NA gene might have transferred from migratory birds infected with avian influenza viruses along the east Asian flyway. The six internal genes of this virus probably originated from two different groups of H9N2 avian influenza viruses, which were isolated from chickens. Detailed analyses also showed that ducks and chickens probably acted as the intermediate hosts leading to the emergence of this virulent H7N9 virus.
Phylogenetic and coalescent analyses of H7N9 genomic sequences indicate that the virus emerged through multiple reassortment events involving duck, migratory bird, and chicken influenza viruses, forming distinct evolutionary lineages associated with human infection.
We correlated genomic sequences from avian influenza viruses with ecological information and did phylogenetic and coalescent analyses to extrapolate the potential origins of the virus and possible routes of reassortment events. The novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus originated from multiple reassortment events... The HA gene might have originated from avian influenza viruses of duck origin, and the NA gene might have transferred from migratory birds infected with avian influenza viruses along the east Asian flyway.
Sequence and structural analyses indicated that the avian influenza A H7N9 virus possesses mutations associated with human receptor binding properties.
We used sequence alignment and homology-modelling methods to study specific mutations regarding phenotypes, specifically addressing the human receptor binding properties.
Method
sequence alignment; homology-modelling
Receptors
human receptor
Recombination Or Reassortment1 records
Recombination Or ReassortmentExtraction confidence 0.95
Key finding
The novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus that infected humans arose through reassortment between duck, migratory bird, and chicken avian influenza virus lineages.
The novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus originated from multiple reassortment events. The HA gene might have originated from avian influenza viruses of duck origin, and the NA gene might have transferred from migratory birds infected with avian influenza viruses along the east Asian flyway. The six internal genes of this virus probably originated from two different groups of H9N2 avian influenza viruses, which were isolated from chickens.
Event type
reassortment
Genes or segments
HA; NA; internal genes
Spillover Event1 records
Spillover EventExtraction confidence 0.90
Key finding
A novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus transmitted from avian hosts, likely ducks and chickens, caused human infections in China.
On March 30, 2013, a novel avian influenza A H7N9 virus that infects human beings was identified... Detailed analyses also showed that ducks and chickens probably acted as the intermediate hosts leading to the emergence of this virulent H7N9 virus.