نتایج جستجو برای: avian viruses

تعداد نتایج: 134523  

2014
Nyamdavaa Khurelbaatar Whitney S. Krueger Gary L. Heil Badarchiin Darmaa Daramragchaa Ulziimaa Damdindorj Tserennorov Ariungerel Baterdene Benjamin D. Anderson Gregory C. Gray

Avian (AIV) and equine influenza virus (EIV) have been repeatedly shown to circulate among Mongolia's migrating birds or domestic horses. In 2009, 439 Mongolian adults, many with occupational exposure to animals, were enrolled in a prospective cohort study of zoonotic influenza transmission. Sera were drawn upon enrollment and again at 12 and 24 months. Participants were contacted monthly for 2...

2008
Wenjun Ma Robert E Kahn Juergen A Richt

Influenza A viruses are highly infectious respiratory pathogens that can infect many species. Birds are the reservoir for all known influenza A subtypes; and novel influenza viruses can emerge from birds and infect mammalian species including humans. Because swine are susceptible to infection with both avian and human influenza viruses, novel reassortant influenza viruses can be generated in th...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2014
Marcel Jonges Matthijs R A Welkers Rienk E Jeeninga Adam Meijer Peter Schneeberger Ron A M Fouchier Menno D de Jong Marion Koopmans

Avian influenza viruses are capable of crossing the species barrier and infecting humans. Although evidence of human-to-human transmission of avian influenza viruses to date is limited, evolution of variants toward more-efficient human-to-human transmission could result in a new influenza virus pandemic. In both the avian influenza A(H5N1) and the recently emerging avian influenza A(H7N9) virus...

2014
Xiaoli Xiong Haixia Xiao Stephen R. Martin Peter J. Coombs Junfeng Liu Patrick J. Collins Sebastien G. Vachieri Philip A. Walker Yi Pu Lin John W. McCauley Steven J. Gamblin John J. Skehel

Mutant H5N1 influenza viruses have been isolated from humans that have increased human receptor avidity. We have compared the receptor binding properties of these mutants with those of wild-type viruses, and determined the structures of their haemagglutinins in complex with receptor analogues. Mutants from Vietnam bind tighter to human receptor by acquiring basic residues near the receptor bind...

Journal: :Vaccine 2008
M F Ducatez R G Webster R J Webby

Influenza A viruses exist within their natural host, aquatic birds, in a number of antigenic subtypes. Only a few of these subtypes have successfully crossed into other avian and mammalian hosts. This brief review will focus on just three examples of viruses that have successfully passed between species; avian H5NI1 and H9N2 viruses and H3N2 viruses which have transmitted from aquatic birds to ...

2014
Carrie Reed Dana Bruden Kathy K Byrd Vic Veguilla Michael Bruce Debby Hurlburt David Wang Crystal Holiday Kathy Hancock Justin R Ortiz Joe Klejka Jacqueline M Katz Timothy M Uyeki

BACKGROUND Highly pathogenic avian influenza A (HPAI) H5N1 viruses have infected poultry and wild birds on three continents with more than 600 reported human cases (59% mortality) since 2003. Wild aquatic birds are the natural reservoir for avian influenza A viruses, and migratory birds have been documented with HPAI H5N1 virus infection. Since 2005, clade 2.2 HPAI H5N1 viruses have spread from...

2009
Junping Shi Jianjun Paul Tian Xiaojie Hou

In this article, we establish a mathematical model for emergence of high pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) viruses from outbreaks of low pathogenicity avian influenza (LPAI) A viruses (H5N2). The model is based on traditional mathematical epidemiology models and experiment evidences. It contains several submodels which are traditional SEIR models or SIR models. The experiments in [25] provid...

2016
Miaomiao Zhang Xingxing Zhang Kaidi Xu Qiaoyang Teng Qinfang Liu Xuesong Li Jianmei Yang Jianqing Xu Hongjun Chen Xiaoyan Zhang Zejun Li

Three H10 subtype avian influenza viruses were isolated from domestic ducks in China, designated as SH602/H10N8, FJ1761/H10N3 and SX3180/H10N7, with an intravenous pathogenicity index (IVPI) of 0.39, 1.60, and 1.27, respectively. These H10 viruses showed a complex pathology pattern in different species, although full genome characterizations of the viruses could not identify any molecular deter...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2006
Gabriele A Landolt Alexander I Karasin Melissa M Schutten Christopher W Olsen

Influenza A viruses cause pandemics at sporadic intervals. Pandemic viruses can potentially be introduced into the human population through in toto transfer of an avian influenza virus or through reassortment between avian and human strains. Pigs are believed to play a central role in the creation of pandemic viruses through reassortment because of their susceptibility to infection with both av...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
G Gabriel B Dauber T Wolff O Planz H-D Klenk J Stech

Mammalian influenza viruses are descendants of avian strains that crossed the species barrier and underwent further adaptation. Since 1997 in southeast Asia, H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses have been causing severe, even fatal disease in humans. Although no lineages of this subtype have been established until now, such repeated events may initiate a new pandemic. As a model of sp...

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