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Bat-borne H9N2 influenza virus evades MxA restriction and exhibits efficient replication and transmission in ferrets.

Nico Joël HalweLea HambergerJulia Sehl-EwertChristin MacheJacob SchönLorenz UlrichSten CalvelageMario TönniesJonas FuchsPooja BandawaneMadhumathi LoganathanAnass AbbadJuan Manuel CarreñoMaria C Bermúdez-GonzálezViviana SimonAhmed M KandeilRabeh El SheshenyMohamed Ahmed AliGhazi KayaliMatthias BudtStefan HippenstielAndreas C HockeFlorian KrammerThorsten WolffMartin SchwemmleKevin CiminskiDonata HoffmannMartin Beer
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Influenza A viruses (IAVs) of subtype H9N2 have reached an endemic stage in poultry farms in the Middle East and Asia. As a result, human infections with avian H9N2 viruses have been increasingly reported. In 2017, an H9N2 virus was isolated for the first time from Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus). Phylogenetic analyses revealed that bat H9N2 is descended from a common ancestor dating back centuries ago. However, the H9 and N2 sequences appear to be genetically similar to current avian IAVs, suggesting recent reassortment events. These observations raise the question of the zoonotic potential of the mammal-adapted bat H9N2. Here, we investigate the infection and transmission potential of bat H9N2 in vitro and in vivo, the ability to overcome the antiviral activity of the human MxA protein, and the presence of N2-specific cross-reactive antibodies in human sera. We show that bat H9N2 has high replication and transmission potential in ferrets, efficiently infects human lung explant cultures, and is able to evade antiviral inhibition by MxA in transgenic B6 mice. Together with its low antigenic similarity to the N2 of seasonal human strains, bat H9N2 fulfils key criteria for pre-pandemic IAVs.
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