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In vivo selection of H1N2 influenza virus reassortants in the ferret model

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  • In vivo selection of H1N2 influenza virus reassortants in the ferret model

    J Virol. 2013 Jan 9. [Epub ahead of print]
    In vivo selection of H1N2 influenza virus reassortants in the ferret model.
    Angel M, Kimble JB, Pena L, Wan H, Perez DR.
    Source

    Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20740, USA.
    Abstract

    Although the ferret model has been extensively used to study pathogenesis and transmission of influenza viruses, little has been done to determine whether ferrets are a good surrogate animal model to study influenza reassortment. It has been previously shown that the pandemic 2009 H1N1 (H1N1pdm) was able to transmit efficiently in ferrets. In co-infection studies with either seasonal H1N1 or H3N2 strains (H1N1s and H3N2s, respectively), the H1N1pdm was able to outcompete these strains and become the dominant transmissible virus. However, lack of reassortment could have been the result of differences in cell or tissue tropism of these viruses in the ferret. To address this issue, we performed co-infection studies with recombinant influenza viruses carrying the surface genes of a seasonal H3N2 in the background of an H1N1pdm strain and vice versa. After serial passages in ferrets, a dominant H1N2 virus population was obtained with a constellation of gene segments, most of which, excepting the NA and PB1 segments, were from the H1N1pdm strain. Our studies suggest that ferrets recapitulate influenza reassortment events. The H1N2 virus generated through this process resembles similar viruses that are emerging in nature, particularly in pigs.

    PMID:
    23302886
    [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

    Although the ferret model has been extensively used to study pathogenesis and transmission of influenza viruses, little has been done to determine whether ferrets are a good surrogate animal model to study influenza virus reassortment. It has been previously shown that the pandemic 2009 H1N1 (H1N1pd …
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