[Scpg] cluck or be clucked

John Calvert jc at calvertdesign.com
Tue Mar 28 21:44:14 PST 2006


rule #1:  don't sleep with the chickens


Researchers Find New Details on Transmission of Avian Flu


By NICHOLAS WADE
Published: March 22, 2006
Two groups of researchers, in Japan and in Holland, have discovered  
why the avian flu virus is transmitted rarely if ever from one person  
to another.

The reason is simply that the cells bearing the type of receptor the  
avian virus is known to favor turn out to be clustered in the deepest  
branches of the human respiratory tract. The viruses thus cannot be  
spread by coughs and sneezes, as are human flu viruses which infect  
cells in the upper respiratory tract.

The avian flu virus would need to accumulate many favorable mutations  
in its genetic material before it could become a pandemic strain,  
said Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a virologist at the both the University of  
Tokyo and the University of Wisconsin. According to a press statement  
he approved, "The finding suggests that scientists and public health  
agencies worldwide may have more time to prepare for an eventual  
pandemic."

Dr. Kawaoka's finding is published in today's issue of Nature and a  
similar finding, by Thijs Kuiken and colleagues of the Erasmus  
Medical Center in Rotterdam, appears in this week's Science.

Flu experts already knew that those attacked by the current avian flu  
virus, a type known as H5, were infected in the lower lung.

Paul Offit, a virologist at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia,  
said the new reports made a lot of sense in explaining why the H5N1  
virus, though it can infect people, does not easily spread from one  
person to another, making its outbreaks very limited.

Virologists agree that another flu pandemic will happen sooner or  
later as one of the 16 types of flu virus in the animal world,  
probably one that infects birds, will manage to switch hosts and grow  
and spread in humans. But they differ as to whether H5 is the  
likeliest candidate to make this switch. Previous known pandemics  
have been caused by H1 type viruses (the 1918 pandemic), H2 (the 1957  
Asian) or H3 (the Hong Kong flu of 1968).

The H5 strain of avian flu has been infecting people since the late  
1950's but has so far failed to develop a form that is easily  
transmissible from one person to another. Some virologists believe it  
could easily do so because it may only need better transmissibility  
to set off a pandemic. That could be obtained simply by switching its  
preference from the cell receptor found in the lower lung, known as  
alpha 2-3, to the receptor found on cells in the upper airways, known  
as alpha 2-6.

A team of scientists at the Scripps Research Institute reported in  
Science last week that only a couple of mutations might be needed to  
enable the H5 virus to make this switch to the alpha 2-6 receptor.  
This is about the same number of mutations as made by the H1, H2 and  
H3 viruses when they learned to infect people. Since viruses mutate  
quickly, a two-mutation step is not so big a hurdle.

Because the H5 virus has killed about half of the 187 people it has  
so far infected, "a lot of its genes are already optimized for  
virulence," said James C. Paulson, a member of the Scripps team. For  
H5 to become pandemic, "The key gene that needs to be mutated is the  
HA gene," he said, referring to the hemagglutinin gene, which makes  
the probe used by the virus to latch on to a cell's receptor sites.

But though H5 might seem only a couple of easy steps away from  
transmissibility among people, many virologists believe mutations in  
several other genes would be necessary as well. Viruses find it very  
hard to switch hosts, and though they may quite often cause outbreaks  
in just a few individuals, "viruses that produce a self-sustaining  
chain of transmission in the new host appear rare," Dr. Kawaoka wrote  
recently in the Annual Review of Microbiology,

The H5 virus has been present in the human population since the late  
1950's, but has never acquired the full set of mutations needed to  
set off a pandemic. The epidemiological evidence "should make us feel  
safe that there's a substantial barrier," Dr. Offit said.

Dr. Offit said it was a good thing to worry about the next pandemic,  
given that about three can be expected every century. "What's not  
good is to try to sell the public on their fear of pandemic flu being  
this particular bird flu, since if it's not, crying wolf will lose  
you credibility," he said.

Peter Palese, a virologist at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine,  
said he did not believe the H5 virus could infect people, except when  
they were exposed to very large doses, such as by sleeping with  
chickens in the same room. "I feel strongly that H5 has been around  
in humans for a long time and never caused a pandemic, suggesting  
that this is not the virus which is likely to be the next pandemic."

But like Dr. Offit, Dr. Palese said he fully supported plans to get  
better prepared for the next flu pandemic. "People have to understand  
we are not really prepared should it come," he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/22/health/22cnd-flu.html? 
_r=3&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

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