A new study suggests a laboratory-mutated H5N1 avian
influenza virus could pose a greater risk to humans than to birds, adding to
concerns about the new avian flu strain that has emerged recently in
China.
Over a year ago, Japanese researchers created a
genetically-altered version of the H5N1 avian influenza virus to explore the
risk of human-to-human transmission. They reported in the journal Nature
in early 2012 that the mutated pathogen could be transmitted among mammals
through the air in aerosol droplets -- for example, from sneezing. They
conducted their experiments with ferrets, small domesticated mammals that are a
good model for human disease transmission.
The experiment showed that the viral strain has the
potential to cause a global human pandemic, even without contact with infected
poultry or even person-to-person contact. That finding sparked international
security concerns that the pathogen could be used as a biological weapon.
So far, 600 cases of H5N1 in humans have been
reported to the World Health Organization. The virus causes severe
pneumonia and respiratory failure. The illness has killed 60 percent of those
who have contracted it.
Following up on the Japanese research, an
international team studied just how infectious the virus would be to humans,
should mutated copies ever jump the species barrier.
John Skehel is a virologist with the National
Institute for Medical Research in London. Writing in the journal Nature,
Skehel and co-researchers describe how effectively amino acids from the mutant
bird-flu strain are able to bind, or latch onto human cell surface proteins or
receptors, as compared with bird or avian cells.
“And we find that it will bind to human receptors
about 200 times better than it binds to avian receptors,” Skehel explained.
In other words, humans appear to be at far greater
risk than birds of becoming ill with the deadly mutated form of the H5N1
virus. And even though the mutant virus' grip on human cells is not as
strong as that of other infectious flu viruses, it still appears, in the
laboratory, to be highly contagious to human cells -- a finding one
researcher described as "confounding."
As scientists continue to learn more about H5N1,
international public health officials are also keeping a close watch on another
avian flu virus, which the World Health organization is calling one of the most
lethal pathogens doctors have ever faced.
Since it was detected this past February, the H7N9
influenza strain has infected more than one hundred people in China, mostly in
Shanghai, and killed nearly one-quarter of them. So far, all human cases
appear to have resulted from contact with infected birds, and the new strain has
shown no signs of being transmissible from human to human.
Tom Frieden is director of the US Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia.
Frieden says H5N1 -- in its natural, unmutated form
-- is easy to spot and control because infected flocks become visibly
sick. Not so with H7N9.
“With H5[N1], the birds get sick and the country
culls the flock and it stops spreading. Here, the birds don’t get sick so
you can’t cull the flock,” stated Frieden.
Frieden says the CDC, like a number of other
international medical research centers, is studying samples of the H7N9 virus
it acquired from China. The CDC is working closely with Chinese health
officials to develop a vaccine against the new bird flu.
Sources :
http://www.voanews.com/content/lab-altered-h5n1-flu-more-infectious-to-humans-than-birds/1649296.html
No comments:
Post a Comment