Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Intra- and interhost evolutionary dynamics of equine influenza virus

Murcia, Pablo R.; Baillie, Gregory J.; Daly, Janet; Elton, Debra; Carley Jervis; Mumford, Jennifer A.; Newton, Richard; Parrish, Colin R.; Hoelzer, Karin; Dougan, Gordon; Parkhill, Julian; Lennard, Nicola; Ormond, Doug; Moule, Sharon; Whitwham, Andrew; McCauley, John W.; McKinley, Trevelyan J.; Holmes, Edward C.; Grenfell, Bryan T.; Wood, James L.N.

Authors

Pablo R. Murcia

Gregory J. Baillie

Debra Elton

Carley Jervis

Jennifer A. Mumford

Richard Newton

Colin R. Parrish

Karin Hoelzer

Gordon Dougan

Julian Parkhill

Nicola Lennard

Doug Ormond

Sharon Moule

Andrew Whitwham

John W. McCauley

Trevelyan J. McKinley

Edward C. Holmes

Bryan T. Grenfell

James L.N. Wood



Abstract

Determining the evolutionary basis of cross-species transmission and immune evasion is key to understanding the mechanisms that control the emergence of either new viruses or novel antigenic variants with pandemic potential. The hemagglutinin glycoprotein of influenza A viruses is a critical host range determinant and a major target of neutralizing antibodies. Equine influenza virus (EIV) is a significant pathogen of the horse that causes periodical outbreaks of disease even in populations with high vaccination coverage. EIV has also jumped the species barrier and emerged as a novel respiratory pathogen in dogs, canine influenza virus. We studied the dynamics of equine influenza virus evolution in horses at the intrahost level and how this evolutionary process is affected by interhost transmission in a natural setting. To this end, we performed clonal sequencing of the hemagglutinin 1 gene derived from individual animals at different times postinfection. Our results show that despite the population consensus sequence remaining invariant, genetically distinct subpopulations persist during the course of infection and are also transmitted, with some variants likely to change antigenicity. We also detected a natural case of mixed infection in an animal infected during an outbreak of equine influenza, raising the possibility of reassortment between different strains of virus. In sum, our data suggest that transmission bottlenecks may not be as narrow as originally perceived and that the genetic diversity required to adapt to new host species may be partially present in the donor host and potentially transmitted to the recipient host.

Citation

Murcia, P. R., Baillie, G. J., Daly, J., Elton, D., Carley Jervis, Mumford, J. A., Newton, R., Parrish, C. R., Hoelzer, K., Dougan, G., Parkhill, J., Lennard, N., Ormond, D., Moule, S., Whitwham, A., McCauley, J. W., McKinley, T. J., Holmes, E. C., Grenfell, B. T., & Wood, J. L. (2010). Intra- and interhost evolutionary dynamics of equine influenza virus. Journal of Virology, 84(14), https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00112-10

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Jul 15, 2010
Publication Date 2010
Deposit Date Mar 9, 2025
Journal Journal of Virology
Print ISSN 0022-538X
Electronic ISSN 1098-5514
Publisher American Society for Microbiology
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 84
Issue 14
DOI https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00112-10
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/46456824
Publisher URL https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/jvi.00112-10