New swine flu virus strain with “pandemic potential” identified in China

A new flu virus strain, identified among pigs in China, is becoming prevalent among workers in the swine industry, according to a study

Photo Courtesy: IANS
Photo Courtesy: IANS
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IANS

A new study has found that Chinese pigs are more and more frequently becoming infected with a strain of influenza that has the potential to jump to humans, could mutate further so that it can spread easily from person to person, and trigger a global outbreak, a report in Hindustan Times said.

“All the essential hallmarks of being highly adapted to infect humans” and needs close monitoring, say scientists at Chinese universities and China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It is of concern that human infection of G4 virus will further human adaptation and increase the risk of a human pandemic,” the researchers said.

The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which focused on an influenza virus named G4. G4 is genetically descended from the H1N1 strain that caused a pandemic in 2009.

According to Hindustan Times, the has three linages; first, similar to strains found in European and Asian birds, second, the H1N1 strain that caused the 2009 pandemic, third, a North American H1N1 that has genes from avian, human, and pig influenza viruses.


G4 virus is especially concerning because its core is an avian influenza virus to which humans have no immunity with bits of mammalian strains mixed in.

A team led by Liu Jinhua from the China Agricultural University (CAU) analysed approx. 30,000 nasal swabs taken from pigs at slaughterhouses in 10 Chinese provinces and 1,000 swabs from pigs with respiratory symptoms seen at their school’s veterinary teaching hospital from 2011 to 2018.

The swabs collected yielded 179 swine influenza viruses, the vast majority of which were G4 or one of five other G strains from the Eurasian avianlike lineage, the report said.

Researchers found that G4 was highly infectious, replicating in human cells and causing more serious symptoms in ferrets than other viruses. Tests also showed that any immunity humans gain from exposure to seasonal flu does not provide protection from G4.

According to blood tests, which showed up antibodies created by exposure to the virus, 10.4% of swine workers had already been infected. The tests showed that as many as 4.4% of the general population also appeared to have been exposed.

The virus has therefore already passed from animals to humans but there is no evidence yet that it can be passed from human to human -- the scientists’ main worry.


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