Transboundary spread of equine influenza viruses (H3N8) in West and Central Africa: Molecular characterization of identified viruses during outbreaks in Niger and Senegal, in 2019.
Alpha Amadou DialloMaman Moutari SouleyAbdoulkarim Issa IbrahimAbdou AlassaneRahila IssaHaladou GagaraBachir YaouAbdou IssiakouMariame DiopRacky Oumar Ba DioufFatou Tall LoModou Moustapha LoMame Thierno BakhoumMamadou SyllaMomar Talla SeckClement MesekoOlufemi D OlaleyeAnn CullinaneTirumala B K SettypalliCharles Euloge LamienWilliam G DundonGiovanni CattoliPublished in: Transboundary and emerging diseases (2020)
Since November 2018, several countries in West and Central Africa have reported mortalities in donkeys and horses. Specifically, more than 66,000 horses and donkeys have succumbed to disease in Burkina Faso, Chad, Cameroon, The Gambia, Ghana, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, and Senegal. Strangles caused by Streptococcus equi subsp equi, African Horse Sickness (AHS) virus, and Equine influenza virus (EIV) were all suspected as potential causative agents. This study reports the identification of EIV in field samples collected in Niger and Senegal. Phylogenetic analysis of the hemagglutinin and neuraminidase genes revealed that the identified viruses belonged to clade 1 of the Florida sublineage and were very similar to viruses identified in Nigeria in 2019. Interestingly, they were also more similar to EIVs from recent outbreaks in South America than to those in Europe and the USA. This is one of the first reports providing detailed description and characterization of EIVs in West and Central Africa region.