Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2023)

Interspecies Transmission of Swine Influenza A Viruses and Human Seasonal Vaccine-Mediated Protection Investigated in Ferret Model

  • Pauline M. van Diemen,
  • Alexander M.P. Byrne,
  • Andrew M. Ramsay,
  • Samantha Watson,
  • Alejandro Nunez,
  • Ana v Moreno,
  • Chiara Chiapponi,
  • Emanuela Foni,
  • Ian H. Brown,
  • Sharon M. Brookes,
  • Helen E. Everett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2909.230066
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 9
pp. 1798 – 1807

Abstract

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We investigated the infection dynamics of 2 influenza A(H1N1) virus isolates from the swine 1A.3.3.2 (pandemic 2009) and 1C (Eurasian, avian-like) lineages. The 1C-lineage virus, A/Pavia/65/2016, although phylogenetically related to swine-origin viruses, was isolated from a human clinical case. This strain infected ferrets, a human influenza model species, and could be transmitted by direct contact and, less efficiently, by airborne exposure. Infecting ferrets and pigs (the natural host) resulted in mild or inapparent clinical signs comparable to those observed with 1A.3.3.2-lineage swine-origin viruses. Both H1N1 viruses could infect pigs and were transmitted to cohoused ferrets. Ferrets vaccinated with a human 2016–17 seasonal influenza vaccine were protected against infection with the antigenically matched 1A pandemic 2009 virus but not against the swine-lineage 1C virus. Our results reaffirm the need for continuous influenza A virus surveillance in pigs and identification of candidate human vaccine viruses.

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