Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5800655 | Veterinary Microbiology | 2014 | 7 Pages |
â¢H9N2 is potentially zoonotic and has become endemic in many parts of the world.â¢H9 and N2 genes were sequenced from 5 H9N2 viruses from Northern Europe.â¢H9N2 was probably transmitted from wild birds to a farm rearing ducks.â¢If poultry screening is focused on H5 and H7 AIV, other subtypes might go undetected.
Low pathogenic avian influenza viruses are maintained in wild bird populations throughout the world. Avian influenza viruses are characterized by their efficient ability to reassort and adapt, which enables them to cross the species barrier and enhances their zoonotic potential. Influenza viruses of the H9N2 subtype appear endemic among poultry in Eurasia. They usually exist as low-pathogenic strains and circulate between wild bird populations, poultry and birds sold at live bird markets. Direct transmission of H9N2 viruses, with receptor specificities similar to human influenza strains, to pigs and humans has been reported on several occasions.H9N2 virus was first encountered in Finland in 2009, during routine screening of hunted wild waterfowl. The next year, H9N2 influenza viruses were isolated from wild birds on four occasions, including once from a farmed mallard. We have investigated the relationship between the reared and wild bird isolates by sequencing the hemagglutinin and the neuraminidase genes of the Finnish H9N2 viruses. Nucleotide sequence comparison and phylogenetic analyses indicate that H9N2 was transmitted from wild birds to reared birds in 2010, and that highly identical strains have been circulating in Europe during the last few years.