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Published 2008

Tropical reservoir for human influenza?

Human influenza is notorious -- not only because it can make you very sick, but because you can get it again and again. Viral antigens differ from year to year -- to such an extent that your immune system fails to recognize this year's virus as something previously encountered.

Electron micrograph of a virus

An influenza virion
Image courtesy of
the Public Health
Image Library

Since 1918, three main subtypes of influenza A virus have been circulating within the human population. These subtypes differ genetically and antigenically from each other. Furthermore, at any one time there is diversity within subtypes, and the nature of this diversity changes over time.

Eddie Holmes, Martha Nelson and colleagues from Edinburgh, Oxford and the National Institutes of Health have now described the spatio-temporal dynamics of evolution in two major human influenza subtypes. Using 1302 complete influenza genomes from the USA (northern hemisphere) and New Zealand (southern hemisphere), they examined how diversity in the A/H1N1 and A/H3N2 lineages changed over a 12-year period starting in the early 1990s.

Their findings, described in Nature, lead them to conclude that:

Details

Authors: Andrew Rambaut, Oliver G. Pybus, Martha I. Nelson, Cecile Viboud, Jeffery K. Taubenberger and Edward C. Holmes

Title: ; The genomic and epidemiological dynamics of human influenza A virus

Journal: Nature

doi: 10.1038/nature06945