Viruses (Apr 2024)

Abundant Intra-Subtype Reassortment Revealed in H13N8 Influenza Viruses

  • Sofia Feoktistova,
  • Marya Sayganova,
  • Kseniya Trutneva,
  • Olga Glazova,
  • Artem S. Blagodatski,
  • Liudmila Shevkova,
  • Anna Navoikova,
  • Yuriy Anisimov,
  • Eugene Albert,
  • Olga Mityaeva,
  • Pavel Volchkov,
  • Andrey Deviatkin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v16040568
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. 568

Abstract

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Influenza A viruses (IAVs) pose a serious threat to global health. On the one hand, these viruses cause seasonal flu outbreaks in humans. On the other hand, they are a zoonotic infection that has the potential to cause a pandemic. The most important natural reservoir of IAVs are waterfowl. In this study, we investigated the occurrence of IAV in birds in the Republic of Buryatia (region in Russia). In 2020, a total of 3018 fecal samples were collected from wild migratory birds near Lake Baikal. Of these samples, 11 were found to be positive for the H13N8 subtype and whole-genome sequencing was performed on them. All samples contained the same virus with the designation A/Unknown/Buryatia/Arangatui-1/2020. To our knowledge, virus A/Unknown/Buryatia/Arangatui-1/2020 is the first representative of the H13N8 subtype collected on the territory of Russia, the sequence of which is available in the GenBank database. An analysis of reassortments based on the genome sequences of other known viruses has shown that A/Unknown/Buryatia/Arangatui-1/2020 arose as a result of reassortment. In addition, a reassortment most likely occurred several decades ago between the ancestors of the viruses recently collected in China, the Netherlands, the United States and Chile. The presence of such reassortment emphasizes the ongoing evolution of the H13N8 viruses distributed in Europe, North and East Asia, North and South America and Australia. This study underscores the importance of the continued surveillance and research of less-studied influenza subtypes.

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