Literature detail

Pathogenicity and immune response of turkey A(H1N2) influenza virus of swine-origin on turkeys and mice.

Chloé Chavoix1,2 Charlotte Pain-Deloizy3 Pascale Massin4 Katell Louboutin4 Florent Souchaud4 Rachel Busson4 Carole Guillemoto4 Angélina Orosco4 Isabelle Pierre4 François-Xavier Briand4 Fabrice Touzain5 Michel Amelot6 Alassane Keita6 Thibaut Larcher7 Jean-Marc Laferte8 Eric Niqueux4 Audrey Schmitz4 Gaëlle Simon5 Béatrice Grasland9 Ronan Le Goffic3
Affiliations 9 institutions
  1. Unit Virology, Immunology and Parasitology in Poultry and Rabbits, Anses, Ploufragan-Plouzané-Niort Laboratory, Ploufragan, France. [email protected].
  2. INRAE, UMR892, Unit Molecular Immunology and Virology, Jouy-en-Josas, France. [email protected].
  3. INRAE, UMR892, Unit Molecular Immunology and Virology, Jouy-en-Josas, France.
  4. Unit Virology, Immunology and Parasitology in Poultry and Rabbits, Anses, Ploufragan-Plouzané-Niort Laboratory, Ploufragan, France.
  5. Unit Swine Virology, Innovation and Genomics, Anses, Ploufragan-Plouzané-Niort Laboratory, Ploufragan, France.
  6. Unit Avian and Rabbit Breeding and Experimental Facility, Anses, Ploufragan-Plouzané-Niort Laboratory, Ploufragan, France.
  7. Oniris/INRAE, UMR703, APEX-PAnTher, Nantes, France.
  8. ECAM Rennes-Louis de Broglie, Cedex 9, 29128, Rennes, CS, France.
  9. Unit Virology, Immunology and Parasitology in Poultry and Rabbits, Anses, Ploufragan-Plouzané-Niort Laboratory, Ploufragan, France. [email protected].
PMID 42237404 2026 Vet Res eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

In 2020, a new swine influenza H1<sub>av</sub>N2#E genotype emerged in pig farms in France. Shortly after its emergence in swine, this virus was detected in breeding turkey farms, and was responsible of a zoonotic infection. Phylogenetic analyses previously conducted on viral sequences led to the selection of three viruses: the first strain detected in turkeys, resulting from a recent spillover from swine to turkeys (A); a second virus also detected in turkeys and likely adapted to this species (B); and a swine reference strain (C). In the context of species-barrier crossing, the aim of this study was to characterize in vivo these three viruses in an avian model, the breeding turkey, and in a mammalian model, the mouse. Clinical signs, lesions, viral loads, and immune responses were evaluated. In turkeys inoculated experimentally, all three viruses caused similar very mild clinical signs and no viral shedding. In contrast, in mice, virus A caused marked clinical signs associated with mortality, along with a weak inflammatory response. Conversely, virus C caused few clinical signs but showed a more pronounced inflammatory response. Surprisingly, only two nonsynonymous mutations were present between viruses C and A: K189R in PB1 and E233K in HA. Virus B displayed an intermediate profile. There was no difference in genomic load in the lungs among the three viruses, suggesting that the observed differences in pathogenicity were due to the immune response rather than viral replication.

cross-species transmission H1N2 Influenza A virus mouse swine turkey Influenza A Virus, H1N2 Subtype Influenza in Birds Orthomyxoviridae Infections Poultry Diseases Swine Diseases Turkeys Animals Female Mice Phylogeny Swine Virulence

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.92
Key finding

A swine-origin A(H1N2) influenza virus detected in pigs in France spilled over into breeding turkeys, representing cross-species transmission from swine to turkeys.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Supporting text

A new swine influenza H1avN2#E genotype emerged in pig farms in France. Shortly after its emergence in swine, this virus was detected in breeding turkey farms, and was responsible of a zoonotic infection. The first strain detected in turkeys resulted from a recent spillover from swine to turkeys.

Method
phylogenetic analysis | field detection
Study design
phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Event type
swine-to-turkey spillover
Geographic raw
France
Country inferred
FRA
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.88
Key finding

Experimental infection showed that all three H1N2 swine-origin viruses caused mild signs without shedding in turkeys, but one caused severe disease and mortality in mice, demonstrating species-specific pathogenic outcomes.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

In turkeys inoculated experimentally, all three viruses caused similar very mild clinical signs and no viral shedding. In contrast, in mice, virus A caused marked clinical signs associated with mortality, along with a weak inflammatory response.

Method
experimental infection | clinical observation | viral load measurement
Sample type
inoculated turkeys | inoculated mice
Study design
animal experiment
Transmission direction
host-range experiment
Event type
experimental infection of turkeys and mice
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Two nonsynonymous mutations, PB1 K189R and HA E233K, differentiated viruses with distinct pathogenicity and immune responses in animal models, suggesting potential host-related adaptation.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Only two nonsynonymous mutations were present between viruses C and A: K189R in PB1 and E233K in HA. Virus A caused marked clinical signs and mortality in mice, whereas virus C caused fewer signs but a stronger inflammatory response.

Method
genomic comparison
Sample type
virus isolates
Study design
comparative genomics
Transmission direction
molecular mechanism only
Event type
amino acid substitutions linked to virulence differences
Genes or proteins
PB1 | HA
Mutations
PB1 K189R | HA E233K
Mechanism types
amino acid substitution