論文

基本情報

氏名 小川 寛人
氏名(カナ) オガワ ヒロヒト
氏名(英語) Ogawa Hirohito
所属 獣医学部 獣医学科
職名 准教授
researchmap研究者コード 6000004515
researchmap機関 岡山理科大学

題名

Serological and molecular epidemiological study on swine influenza in Zambia.

単著・共著の別

 

著者

Hayato Harima
Kosuke Okuya
Masahiro Kajihara
Hirohito Ogawa
Edgar Simulundu
Eugene Bwalya
Yongjin Qiu
Akina Mori-Kajihara
Musso Munyeme
Yoshihiro Sakoda
Takehiko Saito
Bernard M Hang'ombe
Hirofumi Sawa
Aaron S Mweene
Ayato Takada

概要

Influenza A viruses (IAVs) cause highly contagious respiratory diseases in humans and animals. In 2009, a swine-origin pandemic H1N1 IAV, designated A(H1N1)pdm09 virus, spread worldwide, and has since frequently been introduced into pig populations. Since novel reassortant IAVs with pandemic potential may emerge in pigs, surveillance for IAV in pigs is therefore necessary not only for the pig industry but also for public health. However, epidemiological information on IAV infection of pigs in Africa remains sparse. In this study, we collected 246 serum and 605 nasal swab samples from pigs in Zambia during the years 2011-2018. Serological analyses revealed that 49% and 32% of the sera collected in 2011 were positive for hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) and neutralizing antibodies against A(H1N1)pdm09 virus, respectively, whereas less than 5.3% of sera collected during the following period (2012-2018) were positive in both serological tests. The positive rate and the neutralization titers to A(H1N1)pdm09 virus were higher than those to classical swine H1N1 and H1N2 IAVs. On the other hand, the positive rate for swine H3N2 IAV was very low in the pig population in Zambia in 2011-2018 (5.3% and 0% in HI and neutralization tests, respectively). From nasal swab samples, we isolated one H3N2 and eight H1N1 IAV strains with an isolation rate of 1.5%. Phylogenetic analyses of all eight gene segments revealed that the isolated IAVs were closely related to human IAV strains belonging to A(H1N1)pdm09 and seasonal H3N2 lineages. Our findings indicate that reverse zoonotic transmission from humans to pigs occurred during the study period in Zambia and highlight the need for continued surveillance to monitor the status of IAVs circulating in swine populations in Africa. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

発表雑誌等の名称

Transboundary and emerging diseases

出版者

 

69

4

開始ページ

e931-e943

終了ページ

 

発行又は発表の年月

2021-11-01

査読の有無

有り

招待の有無

 

記述言語

英語

掲載種別

研究論文(学術雑誌)

ISSN

 

ID:DOI

10.1111/tbed.14373

ID:NAID(CiNiiのID)

 

ID:PMID

 

JGlobalID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCIDのPut Code

 

DBLP ID