نتایج جستجو برای: avian viruses

تعداد نتایج: 134523  

2017
Ahmed O. Hassan Omar Amen Ekramy E. Sayedahmed Sai V. Vemula Samuel Amoah Ian York Shivaprakash Gangappa Suryaprakash Sambhara Suresh K. Mittal

The emergence of H5, H7, and H9 avian influenza virus subtypes in humans reveals their pandemic potential. Although human-to-human transmission has been limited, the genetic reassortment of the avian and human/porcine influenza viruses or mutations in some of the genes resulting in virus replication in the upper respiratory tract of humans could generate novel pandemic influenza viruses. Curren...

2010
Philip M. Hansbro Simone Warner John P. Tracey K. Edla Arzey Paul Selleck Kim O’Riley Emma L. Beckett Chris Bunn Peter D. Kirkland Dhanasekaran Vijaykrishna Bjorn Olsen Aeron C. Hurt

We investigated carriage of avian influenza viruses by wild birds in Australia, 2005-2008, to assess the risks to poultry industries and human health. We collected 21,858 (7,357 cloacal, 14,501 fecal) samples and detected 300 viruses, representing a detection rate of ≈1.4%. Rates were highest in autumn (March-May) and differed substantially between bird types, areas, and years. We typed 107 avi...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2014
Yasushi Suzuki Yuko Uchida Taichiro Tanikawa Naohiro Maeda Nobuhiro Takemae Takehiko Saito

UNLABELLED Amino acid substitutions were introduced into avian influenza virus PB1 in order to characterize the interaction between polymerase activity and pathogenicity. Previously, we used recombinant viruses containing the hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) genes from the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) H5N1 strain and other internal genes from two low-pathogenicity av...

Journal: :The Journal of veterinary medical science 2000
T Sugimura Y Murakami T Ogawa

The susceptibilities of culture cells to twelve avian influenza virus strains were determined with ten established cell lines including MDCK and ESK cells and three primary culture cells. The established cell lines derived from embryonic swine kidney (ESK) and chicken kidney (CK) primary culture cells were more sensitive to the avian influenza viruses than the other eleven cells. The ESK cell h...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2004
Katharine M Sturm-Ramirez Trevor Ellis Barry Bousfield Lucy Bissett Kitman Dyrting Jerold E Rehg Leo Poon Yi Guan Malik Peiris Robert G Webster

Waterfowl are the natural reservoir of all influenza A viruses, which are usually nonpathogenic in wild aquatic birds. However, in late 2002, outbreaks of highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza virus caused deaths among wild migratory birds and resident waterfowl, including ducks, in two Hong Kong parks. In February 2003, an avian H5N1 virus closely related to one of these viruses was isolated from t...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2008
Hongquan Wan Erin M. Sorrell Haichen Song Md Jaber Hossain Gloria Ramirez-Nieto Isabella Monne James Stevens Giovanni Cattoli Ilaria Capua Li-Mei Chen Ruben O. Donis Julia Busch James C. Paulson Christy Brockwell Richard Webby Jorge Blanco Mohammad Q. Al-Natour Daniel R. Perez

H9N2 avian influenza A viruses are endemic in poultry of many Eurasian countries and have caused repeated human infections in Asia since 1998. To evaluate the potential threat of H9N2 viruses to humans, we investigated the replication and transmission efficiency of H9N2 viruses in the ferret model. Five wild-type (WT) H9N2 viruses, isolated from different avian species from 1988 through 2003, w...

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2007
Masato Hatta Yasuko Hatta Jin Hyun Kim Shinji Watanabe Kyoko Shinya Tung Nguyen Phuong Song Lien Quynh Mai Le Yoshihiro Kawaoka

Highly pathogenic avian H5N1 influenza A viruses have spread throughout Asia, Europe, and Africa, raising serious worldwide concern about their pandemic potential. Although more than 250 people have been infected with these viruses, with a consequent high rate of mortality, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the efficient transmission of H5N1 viruses among humans remain elusive. We used a...

2004
Y. P. Lin M. Bennett V. Gregory S. Grambas P. Lenihan A. Hay

The influenza A H1N1 viruses, initially isolated from pigs in Ireland in 1991, were genetically distinct from previously identified human and swine H1N1 viruses, and appear to be the result of introduction of an avian virus distinct from those circulating in pigs in other European countries. The first Irish H3N2 swine isolates were genetically closely related to human H3N2 viruses. In contrast,...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2005
Z Kou F M Lei J Yu Z J Fan Z H Yin C X Jia K J Xiong Y H Sun X W Zhang X M Wu X B Gao T X Li

The 2004 outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 disease in China led to a great poultry loss and society attention. A survey of avian influenza viruses was conducted on tree sparrows (Passer montanus) collected in China in 2004. Four viruses were isolated from free-living tree sparrows. The results of the whole-genome analysis indicated that an H5N1 virus with a new genotype is cir...

2012
Alam Jahangir Sakchai Ruenphet Nadia Sultana Dany Shoham Kazuaki Takehara

The pandemic influenza virus strains of 1918 (H1N1), 1957 (H2N2), 1968 (H3N2), and 2009 (H1N1) have genes related to avian influenza viruses (AIVs). The nonstructural (NS) gene of AIVs plays a significant role in host-viral interaction. However, little is known about the degree of diversity of this gene in Northern pintail (Anas acuta) ducks wintering in Japan. This study describes characterist...

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