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The Modes of Evolutionary Emergence of Primal and Late Pandemic Influenza Virus Strains from Viral Reservoir in Animals: An Interdisciplinary Analysis
Author(s) -
Dany Shoham
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
influenza research and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-1399
pISSN - 2090-1380
DOI - 10.1155/2011/861792
Subject(s) - domestication , meleagris gallopavo , biology , pandemic , anas , influenza a virus subtype h5n1 , evolutionary biology , virus , virology , genome , zoology , genetics , gene , covid-19 , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , medicine , disease
Based on a wealth of recent findings, in conjunction with earliest chronologies pertaining to evolutionary emergences of ancestral RNA viruses, ducks, Influenzavirus A (assumingly within ducks), and hominids, as well as to the initial domestication of mallard duck ( Anas platyrhynchos ), jungle fowl ( Gallus gallus ), wild turkey ( Meleagris gallopavo ), wild boar ( Sus scrofa ), and wild horse ( Equus ferus ), presumed genesis modes of primordial pandemic influenza strains have multidisciplinarily been configured. The virological fundamentality of domestication and farming of those various avian and mammalian species has thereby been demonstrated and broadly elucidated, within distinctive coevolutionary paradigms. The mentioned viral genesis modes were then analyzed, compatibly with common denominators and flexibility that mark the geographic profile of the last 18 pandemic strains, which reputedly emerged since 1510, the antigenic profile of the last 10 pandemic strains since 1847, and the genomic profile of the last 5 pandemic strains since 1918, until present. Related ecophylogenetic and biogeographic aspects have been enlightened, alongside with the crucial role of spatial virus gene dissemination by avian hosts. A fairly coherent picture of primary and late evolutionary and genomic courses of pandemic strains has thus been attained, tentatively. Specific patterns underlying complexes prone to generate past and future pandemic strains from viral reservoir in animals are consequentially derived.

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