 | | ARTICLE ABSTRACT |
| | DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.19302 |
| | Online 6 June 2003 |
The origin of the 1918 pandemic influenza virus: a
continuing enigma
Ann H. Reid and Jeffery K. Taubenberger
Division of Molecular Pathology, Department of Cellular
Pathology and Genetics, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, 1413
Research Blvd, Building 101, Room 1057, Rockville, MD 20850-3125,
USA
Influenza A virus is a major public health threat, killing more
than 30 000 per year in the USA alone, sickening millions and inflicting
substantial economic costs. Novel influenza virus strains emerge
periodically to which humans have little immunity, resulting in
devastating pandemics. The 1918 pandemic killed nearly 700 000
Americans and 40 million people worldwide. Pandemics in 1957 and
1968, while much less devastating than 1918, also caused tens of
thousands of deaths in the USA. The influenza A virus is capable of
enormous genetic variability, both by continuous, gradual mutation
and by reassortment of gene segments between viruses. Both the 1957
and 1968 pandemic strains are thought to have originated as
reassortants, in which one or both human-adapted viral surface
proteins were replaced by proteins from avian influenza virus
strains. Analyses of the surface proteins of the 1918 pandemic
strain, however, suggest that this strain may have had a different
origin. The haemagglutinin gene segment of the virus may have come
directly from an avian source different from those currently
circulating. Alternatively, the virus, or some of its gene
segments, may have evolved in an intermediate host before emerging
as a human pathogen. Determining whether pandemic influenza virus
strains can emerge via different pathways will affect the scope and
focus of surveillance and prevention efforts.
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This article is now available in the September
2003 print issue of JGV (vol. 84, 22852292).
The complete issue of the journal may be seen in electronic form on JGV Online.