AI Article Synopsis

  • H5N1 avian influenza viruses pose significant threats to poultry industries, particularly affecting domestic quail, which have recently gained popularity for meat and egg production in Asia.
  • Two H5N1-positive quail samples from Vietnam (CVVI-49/2010 and CVVI-50/2014) were isolated and analyzed, revealing evolutionary variations in H5N1 viruses worldwide.
  • Phylogenetic analysis showed that quail strains have connections to viruses from other regions and exhibited genetic changes linked to drug resistance and evidence of multiple reassortment events, highlighting the need for further monitoring of HPAI viruses in quail.

Article Abstract

H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses are considered a threat to national animal industries, causing production losses and high mortality in domestic poultry. In recent years, quail has become a popular terrestrial poultry species raised for production of meat and eggs in Asia. In this study, to better understand the roles of quail in H5N1 viral evolution, two H5N1-positive samples, designated A/quail/Vietnam/CVVI-49/2010 (CVVI-49/2010) and A/quail/Vietnam/CVVI-50/2014 (CVVI-50/2014), were isolated from quail during H5N1 outbreaks in Vietnam, and their whole genome were analyzed. The phylogenetic analysis reveals new evolutionary variation in the worldwide H5N1 viruses. The quail HA genes were clustered into clades 1.1.1 (CVVI-49/2010) and clade 2.3.2.1c (CVVI-50/2014), which may have evolved from viruses circulating from chickens and/or ducks in Cambodia, mainland of China, Taiwan, Indonesia, and South Korea in recent years. Interestingly, the M2 gene of the CVVI-49/2010 strain contained amino acid substitutions at position 26L-I and 31S-N that are related to amantadine-resistance. In particular, the CVVI-50/2014 strain revealed evidence of multiple intersubtype reassortment events between virus clades 2.3.2.1c, 2.3.2.1b, and 2.3.2.1a. Data from this study supports the possible role of quail as an important intermediate host in avian influenza virus evolution. Therefore, additional surveillance is needed to monitor these HPAI viruses both serologically and virologically in quail.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4765837PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0149608PLOS

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