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Genesis and spread of multiple reassortants during the 2016/2017 H5 avian influenza epidemic in Eurasia

August 7, 2020

Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses of the H5 A/goose/Guangdong/1/96 lineage can cause severe disease in poultry and wild birds, and occasionally in humans. In recent years, H5 HPAI viruses of this lineage infecting poultry in Asia have spilled over into wild birds and spread via bird migration to countries in Europe, Africa, and North America. In 2016/2017, this spillover resulted in the largest HPAI epidemic on record in Europe and was associated with an unusually high frequency of reassortments between H5 HPAI viruses and cocirculating low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses. Here, we show that the seven main H5 reassortant viruses had various combinations of gene segments 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6. Using detailed time-resolved phylogenetic analysis, most of these gene segments likely originated from wild birds and at dates and locations that corresponded to their hosts’ migratory cycles. However, some gene segments in two reassortant viruses likely originated from domestic anseriforms, either in spring 2016 in east China or in autumn 2016 in central Europe. Our results demonstrate that, in addition to domestic anseriforms in Asia, both migratory wild birds and domestic anseriforms in Europe are relevant sources of gene segments for recent reassortant H5 HPAI viruses. The ease with which these H5 HPAI viruses reassort, in combination with repeated spillovers of H5 HPAI viruses into wild birds, increases the risk of emergence of a reassortant virus that persists in wild bird populations yet remains highly pathogenic for poultry.

Publication Year 2020
Title Genesis and spread of multiple reassortants during the 2016/2017 H5 avian influenza epidemic in Eurasia
DOI 10.1073/pnas.2001813117
Authors Samantha Lycett, Anne Pohlmann, Christoph Staubach, Valentina Caliendo, Mark Woolhouse, Martin Beer, Thijs Kuiken, Steven van Borm, Andrew Breed, Francois-Xavier Briand, Ian Brown, Adam Dan, Thomas J. DeLiberto, Sophie von Dobschuetz, Ron A. M. Fouchier, Marius Gilbert, Sarah Hill, Charlotte Kristiane Hjulsager, Hon S. Ip, Marion Koopmans, Lars Erik Larsen, Dong-Hun Lee, Mahmoud Mohamed Naguib, I. Monne, Oliver Pybus, Andrew M. Ramey, Vladmir Savic, Kirill Sharshov, Alexander Shestopalov, Chang-Seon Song, Mieke Steensels, David Swayne, Edyta Swieton, Xiu-Feng Wan, Siamak Zohari
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title PNAS
Index ID 70211946
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization National Wildlife Health Center