The Hindu - International

Will cattle be the next lab for u host-switching?

The co-expression of both human and avian receptors in the mammary glands of cows indicate susceptibi­lity to viruses of both swine/human and avian origin

- R. Prasad

Cattle have so far not been associated with being infected on large-scale, and as a result, cattle have not been well studied as domestic hosts for inˆuenza A virus species. In contrast to the notion that cattle are considered to be almost resistant to infection with inˆuenza A virus, H5N1 virus, which was ‡rst detected in dairy cattle in Texas in late March, has rapidly spread to 37 herds in nine States in the U.S. as of May 7.

On April 24, the U.S. FDA said that in a nationally representa­tive commercial milk sampling study of pasteurise­d milk, about one in ‡ve of the retail samples tested positive for bird ˆu viral fragments. A greater proportion of positive results were in milk from areas with infected herds. An NIH-funded study had found an absence of infectious virus in milk samples. The April 23 report of the FAO noted that the H5N1 virus was detected in “high concentrat­ions in milk from infected dairy cattle and at levels greater than that seen in respirator­y samples”. That the concentrat­ion was less in the respirator­y samples of the infected cows compared with the milk samples strongly suggests that the pathogenes­is of the H5N1 virus in cattle di£ers from other mammals, says a study posted as a preprint; preprints are yet to be peer-reviewed.

One reason for dairy cattle milk containing high concentrat­ions of H5N1 virus fragments could be the propensity of the virus to infect the mammary glands of cows as a previous study had found. On evaluating the expression of H5N1 receptors in the mammary gland, respirator­y tract and cerebrum of cattle, the authors found both the human and the duck receptors to be highly expressed in the mammary glands. In the mammary gland, the human receptors and the duck receptors were found to be widely distribute­d in the alveoli but not in the ducts. Chicken-type inˆuenza receptors were common in the cow respirator­y tract. The high concentrat­ion of H5N1 virus fragments in milk from H5N1infect­ed cows could be due to local viral replicatio­n in the mammary glands of cows as H5N1 has a high af‡nity for the receptor, the authors say.

The study found that the chicken receptor was expressed on the surface of the respirator­y epithelium in the upper respirator­y tract and upper part of the lower respirator­y tract, while human and duck receptors were either lacking or very limited in expression. However, in the lung alveolar cells, the researcher­s found all the receptors of humans, chickens and ducks being abundantly expressed.

The abundance of human and duck receptors in the mammary glands and the large presence of human, chicken and duck receptors in the lung alveolar cells of cows provides a perfect environmen­t for the evolution of H5N1 viruses that can easily spread from animals to humans. The reason why pigs are called the “evolutiona­ry lab for ˆu host switching” is precisely due to the presence of both the human-ˆu and avian-ˆu host cell receptors in their upper-respirator­y tract, says Dr. Sam Scarpino from Northeaste­rn University in a tweet. The latest study has found that cow mammary glands contain the same kind of mixed ˆu receptors seen in pigs.

“One of the key changes required for avian ˆu to transmit e£ectively in humans involves ˆu’s hemaggluti­nin (HA) host cell receptor preference,” Dr. Scarpino said in another tweet. “Currently the cell surface receptor that inˆuenza uses in birds is subtly di£erent from the one in the human upper-respirator­y tract”. But when pigs get infected with human and avian inˆuenza viruses at the same time, the viruses can potentiall­y undergo reassortme­nt, wherein small segments of their genomes get swapped. The swapping might sometimes help the avian ˆu viruses to become better adapted to bind to human receptors and hence spread from birds to humans more easily. The H1N1 pandemic of 2009 was due to the reassortme­nt of the virus in pig population­s.

“The co-expression of both human and avian receptors in the mammary glands indicate susceptibi­lity to viruses of both swine/human and avian origin. The co-expression of both receptors can make bovines to behave like a mixing vessel for new inˆuenza A virus with increased zoonotic potential, the authors write.

With the mammary glands of cows harbouring receptors for both humanˆu and avian-ˆu, “dairy cattle may have similar potential as pigs to serve as evolutiona­ry intermedia­ries between avian and human ˆu”.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India