AI Article Synopsis

  • The 1997 "bird flu" incident in Hong Kong highlighted the role of domestic birds like turkeys and chickens in the ecology of influenza A viruses, with evidence suggesting domestic avian strains often originate from wild birds.
  • Researchers compared H7N3 viruses from wild ducks in Italy (2001) to strains in turkeys (2002-2003) and found 99% genetic similarity, indicating a close relationship between wild and domestic strains.
  • The study suggests that the turkey H7N3 viruses were directly derived from wild avian strains, which is crucial for understanding how influenza viruses can transfer between species and potentially lead to pandemics.

Article Abstract

Since the "bird flu" incident in Hong Kong SAR in 1997, several studies have highlighted the substantial role of domestic birds, such as turkeys and chickens, in the ecology of influenza A viruses. Even if recent evidence suggests that chickens can maintain several influenza serotypes, avian influenza viruses (AIVs) circulating in domestic species are believed to be introduced each time from the wild bird reservoir. However, so far the direct precursor of influenza viruses from domestic birds has never been identified. In this report, we describe the antigenic and genetic characterization of the surface proteins of H7N3 viruses isolated from wild ducks in Italy in 2001 in comparison to H7N3 strains that circulated in Italian turkeys in 2002-2003. The wild and domestic avian strains appeared strictly related at both phenotypic and genetic level: homology percentages in seven of their genes were comprised between 99.8% (for PB2) and 99.1% (for M), and their NA genes differed mainly because of a 23-aminoacid deletion in the NA stalk. Outside this region of the molecule, the NAs of the two virus groups showed 99% similarity. These findings indicate that turkey H7N3 viruses were derived "in toto" from avian influenza strains circulating in wild waterfowl 1 year earlier, and represent an important step towards the comprehension of the mechanisms leading to interspecies transmission and emergence of potentially pandemic influenza viruses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2004.02.015DOI Listing

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