Three
mutations could make bird flu a potential pandemic:
study
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[June 16, 2017] By
Kate Kelland, Health and Science Correspondent
LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists have
identified three mutations that, if they occurred at the same time in
nature, could turn a strain of bird flu now circulating in China into a
potential pandemic virus that could spread among people.
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The flu strain, known as H7N9, now mostly infects birds but it has
infected at least 779 people in outbreaks in and around China,
mainly related to poultry markets.
The World Health Organization said earlier this year that all bird
flu viruses need constant monitoring, warning that their constantly
changing nature makes them "a persistent and significant threat to
public health".
At the moment, the H7N9 virus does not have the capability to spread
sustainably from person to person. But scientists are worried it
could at any time mutate into a form that does.
To assess this risk, researchers led by James Paulson of the Scripps
Research Institute in California looked at mutations that could
potentially take place in the H7N9 virus's genome.
They focused on the H7 hemagglutanin, a protein on the flu virus
surface that allows it to latch onto host cells.
The team's findings, published in the journal PLoS Pathogens on
Thursday, showed that in laboratory tests, mutations in three amino
acids made the virus more able to bind to human cells - suggesting
these changes are key to making the virus more dangerous to people.
Scientists not directly involved in this study said its findings
were important, but should not cause immediate alarm.
"This study will help us to monitor the risk posed by bird flu in a
more informed way, and increasing our knowledge of which changes in
bird flu viruses could be potentially dangerous will be very useful
in surveillance," said Fiona Culley, an expert in respiratory
immunology at Imperial College London.
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She noted that while "some of the individual mutations have been
seen naturally, ... these combinations of mutations have not", and
added: "The chances of all three occurring together is relatively
low."
Wendy Barclay, a virologist and flu specialist also at Imperial,
said the study's findings were important in showing why H7N9 bird
flu should be kept under intense surveillance.
"These studies keep H7N9 virus high on the list of viruses we should
be concerned about," she said. "The more people infected, the higher
the chance that the lethal combination of mutations could occur."
(Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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