Genetic Reassortment of Avian, Swine, and Human Influenza A Viruses in American Pigs

Nan Zhou(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Dennis A. Senne(United States Department of Agriculture), John S. Landgraf(United States Department of Agriculture), Sabrina L. Swenson(United States Department of Agriculture), G. A. Erickson(North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services), Kurt Rossow(University of Minnesota), Lin Liu(University of Minnesota), Kyoung‐Jin Yoon(Iowa State University), Scott Krauss(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Robert G. Webster(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital)
Journal of Virology
October 1, 1999
Cited by 607Open Access
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Abstract

In late summer through early winter of 1998, there were several outbreaks of respiratory disease in the swine herds of North Carolina, Texas, Minnesota, and Iowa. Four viral isolates from outbreaks in different states were analyzed genetically. Genotyping and phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that the four swine viruses had emerged through two different pathways. The North Carolina isolate is the product of genetic reassortment between H3N2 human and classic swine H1N1 influenza viruses, while the others arose from reassortment of human H3N2, classic swine H1N1, and avian viral genes. The hemagglutinin genes of the four isolates were all derived from the human H3N2 virus circulating in 1995. It remains to be determined if either of these recently emerged viruses will become established in the pigs in North America and whether they will become an economic burden.


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