Just a handful of genetic mutations can turn bird flu into a highly
infectious pathogen that could wreak havoc on humans, according to a new
paper published today. It’s the first of two controversial virus
mutation papers to get its day in the sun, and it shows how the H5N1 flu
could evolve to infect mammals.
To test the virus, researchers led by Masaki Imai and Yoshihiro
Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison combined elements of
avian flu with a recent pandemic human flu, the 2009 variant of H1N1
(you may know it as the swine flu). The new flu was capable of passing
from experimental ferret to ferret through the air. (Ferrets are
considered the best animal model of how flu works in humans.) The sick
ferrets lost weight and had respiratory lesions, but they did not die.
“The findings described here will advance our understanding of the
mechanisms and evolutionary pathways that contribute to avian influenza
virus transmission in mammals,” the authors write.
To understand what’s so dangerous about this virus, it helps to
understand a bit about how the flu and its variants work. The name
describes the molecular components of the virus; so H5N1 flu, for
example, is a variant with type 5 hemagglutinin and type 1 neuraminidase
proteins.
Humans have no immunity to flu viruses with a type 5 hemagglutinin.
If it were to spread among people, a pandemic would likely ensue. But
while H5N1 flu has been around in poultry for at least 16 years, there
are only a handful of reports of human cases. The human cases have been
unusually severe — at least compared with other animal-transmitted flu
viruses — but the lack of a human-to-human transmission raised some
questions about whether this flu could really adapt to infect us.
Perhaps the H5 protein didn’t work very well in mammalian cells.
This research helped answer that question. Not only could an H5 flu
indeed mutate to become transmissible among mammals, it only required
four mutations to do so.

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