Molecular identification and phylogenetic characterization of influenza A virus at a wildlife–livestock interface in Mexico

Influenza A virus (IAV) outbreaks constitute a constant threat to public health and pose a remarkable impact on socio‐economic systems worldwide. Interactions between wild and domestic birds, humans and swine can lead to spillover events. Backyard livestock systems in proximity to wetlands represent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transboundary and emerging diseases 2021-11, Vol.68 (6), p.3563-3573
Hauptverfasser: Mateus‐Anzola, Jessica, Gaytan‐Cruz, Liliana, Montoya‐Carrillo, Cecilia, Ivan Sánchez‐Betancourt, José, Zarza, Heliot, Segura‐Velázquez, René, Ojeda‐Flores, Rafael
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container_end_page 3573
container_issue 6
container_start_page 3563
container_title Transboundary and emerging diseases
container_volume 68
creator Mateus‐Anzola, Jessica
Gaytan‐Cruz, Liliana
Montoya‐Carrillo, Cecilia
Ivan Sánchez‐Betancourt, José
Zarza, Heliot
Segura‐Velázquez, René
Ojeda‐Flores, Rafael
description Influenza A virus (IAV) outbreaks constitute a constant threat to public health and pose a remarkable impact on socio‐economic systems worldwide. Interactions between wild and domestic birds, humans and swine can lead to spillover events. Backyard livestock systems in proximity to wetlands represent high‐risk areas for viral spread. However, some gaps remain in our knowledge of IAV transmission at the wildlife–livestock interface in Mexico. Hence, the study aimed at molecular identification and phylogenetic characterization of IAV in the wild duck–backyard livestock interface at a wetland of Mexico. A total of 875 animals were tested by real‐time RT‐PCR (qRT‐PCR). We detected IAV in 3.68% of the wild ducks sampled during the winter season 2016–2017. Nonetheless, the samples obtained from backyard poultry and swine tested negative. The highest IAV frequency (11.10%) was found in the Mexican duck (Anas diazi). Subtypes H1N1, H3N2 and H5N2 were detected. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that IAV detected in wild birds from the Lerma wetlands was mostly related to swine and poultry IAV strains previously isolated in the United States and Mexico. Except, the UIFMVZ377/H5N2 related to North American waterbirds. In conclusion, the co‐circulation of three IAV subtypes in wild ducks close to backyard farms in Mexico, as well as the local identification of influenza viruses genetically related to Mexican and North American IAV strains, highlights the importance of the Lerma marshes for influenza surveillance given the close interaction among wild birds, poultry, pigs and humans.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/tbed.13962
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Interactions between wild and domestic birds, humans and swine can lead to spillover events. Backyard livestock systems in proximity to wetlands represent high‐risk areas for viral spread. However, some gaps remain in our knowledge of IAV transmission at the wildlife–livestock interface in Mexico. Hence, the study aimed at molecular identification and phylogenetic characterization of IAV in the wild duck–backyard livestock interface at a wetland of Mexico. A total of 875 animals were tested by real‐time RT‐PCR (qRT‐PCR). We detected IAV in 3.68% of the wild ducks sampled during the winter season 2016–2017. Nonetheless, the samples obtained from backyard poultry and swine tested negative. The highest IAV frequency (11.10%) was found in the Mexican duck (Anas diazi). Subtypes H1N1, H3N2 and H5N2 were detected. 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subjects Aquatic birds
backyard poultry
backyard swine
Ducks
Farms
hunter‐harvested wild ducks
Impact analysis
Influenza
Influenza A
Livestock
phylogenetic analysis
Phylogenetics
Phylogeny
Poultry
Public health
qRT‐PCR
Strains (organisms)
Swine
the Lerma marshes
Viruses
Water circulation
Waterfowl
Wetlands
Wildlife
title Molecular identification and phylogenetic characterization of influenza A virus at a wildlife–livestock interface in Mexico
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