Literature detail

The novel human influenza A(H7N9) virus is naturally adapted to efficient growth in human lung tissue.

Jessica Knepper1 Kristina L Schierhorn Anne Becher Matthias Budt Mario Tönnies Torsten T Bauer Paul Schneider Jens Neudecker Jens C Rückert Achim D Gruber Norbert Suttorp Brunhilde Schweiger Stefan Hippenstiel Andreas C Hocke Thorsten Wolff
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Division of Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses, Robert Koch-Institut, Berlin, Germany.
PMID 24105764 2013 mBio eng epublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

A novel influenza A virus (IAV) of the H7N9 subtype has been isolated from severely diseased patients with pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome and, apparently, from healthy poultry in March 2013 in Eastern China. We evaluated replication, tropism, and cytokine induction of the A/Anhui/1/2013 (H7N9) virus isolated from a fatal human infection and two low-pathogenic avian H7 subtype viruses in a human lung organ culture system mimicking infection of the lower respiratory tract. The A(H7N9) patient isolate replicated similarly well as a seasonal IAV in explanted human lung tissue, whereas avian H7 subtype viruses propagated poorly. Interestingly, the avian H7 strains provoked a strong antiviral type I interferon (IFN-I) response, whereas the A(H7N9) virus induced only low IFN levels. Nevertheless, all viruses analyzed were detected predominantly in type II pneumocytes, indicating that the A(H7N9) virus does not differ in its cellular tropism from other avian or human influenza viruses. Tissue culture-based studies suggested that the low induction of the IFN-β promoter correlated with an efficient suppression by the viral NS1 protein. These findings demonstrate that the zoonotic A(H7N9) virus is unusually well adapted to efficient propagation in human alveolar tissue, which most likely contributes to the severity of lower respiratory tract disease seen in many patients. Humans are usually not infected by avian influenza A viruses (IAV), but this large group of viruses contributes to the emergence of human pandemic strains. Transmission of virulent avian IAV to humans is therefore an alarming event that requires assessment of the biology as well as pathogenic and pandemic potentials of the viruses in clinically relevant models. Here, we demonstrate that an early virus isolate from the recent A(H7N9) outbreak in Eastern China replicated as efficiently as human-adapted IAV in explanted human lung tissue, whereas avian H7 subtype viruses were unable to propagate. Robust replication of the H7N9 strain correlated with a low induction of antiviral beta interferon (IFN-β), and cell-based studies indicated that this is due to efficient suppression of the IFN response by the viral NS1 protein. Thus, explanted human lung tissue appears to be a useful experimental model to explore the determinants facilitating cross-species transmission of the H7N9 virus to humans.

Animals Birds Cell Line China Humans Influenza A virus Influenza in Birds Influenza, Human Interferon-beta Lung Molecular Sequence Data Virus Replication

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

The human A/Anhui/1/2013 (H7N9) influenza virus replicated efficiently in explanted human lung tissue, unlike avian H7 subtype viruses that showed poor propagation.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We evaluated replication, tropism, and cytokine induction of the A/Anhui/1/2013 (H7N9) virus isolated from a fatal human infection and two low-pathogenic avian H7 subtype viruses in a human lung organ culture system mimicking infection of the lower respiratory tract. The A(H7N9) patient isolate replicated similarly well as a seasonal IAV in explanted human lung tissue, whereas avian H7 subtype viruses propagated poorly.

Method
replication assay; tropism analysis
Sample type
lung tissue
Experimental system
ex vivo organ culture
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Avian H7 subtype influenza viruses replicated poorly in explanted human lung tissue compared with the H7N9 human isolate.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We evaluated replication, tropism, and cytokine induction of the A/Anhui/1/2013 (H7N9) virus isolated from a fatal human infection and two low-pathogenic avian H7 subtype viruses in a human lung organ culture system mimicking infection of the lower respiratory tract. ... avian H7 subtype viruses propagated poorly.

Method
replication assay; tropism analysis
Sample type
lung tissue
Experimental system
ex vivo organ culture
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Suppression of the human interferon-β response by the viral NS1 protein contributes to efficient replication of A(H7N9) influenza virus in human lung tissue, indicating molecular adaptation to the human host.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Tissue culture-based studies suggested that the low induction of the IFN-β promoter correlated with an efficient suppression by the viral NS1 protein. These findings demonstrate that the zoonotic A(H7N9) virus is unusually well adapted to efficient propagation in human alveolar tissue.

Genes or proteins
NS1
Host factors
interferon-β; type I interferon
Mechanism types
immune_escape; replication_efficiency
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Influenza A(H7N9) virus was isolated from both human patients and healthy poultry in Eastern China, indicating an avian-to-human spillover event during the 2013 outbreak.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

A novel influenza A virus (IAV) of the H7N9 subtype has been isolated from severely diseased patients with pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome and, apparently, from healthy poultry in March 2013 in Eastern China.

Method
virus isolation
Study design
outbreak investigation
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Eastern China
Country inferred
China