What is it about?
Several patients became naturally infected with the new pandemic H1N1 virus in 2009 and the older seasonal H1N1 virus. In one patient we found these two viruses reassorting and generating new progeny viruses with genes from both parent viruses. This demonstrate the mixing of Flu viruses in a patient - not only in animals such as birds and pigs.
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Why is it important?
Flu evolution can be driven by reassortment - generally inducing large changes and held responsible for the genesis of Flu viruses of concern, such as bidflu H5N1 and the novel H7N9. Here we show one of the few detections of patients as mixing vessels for Flu viruses. This is particularly noteworthy for situations where people are in close contact with animals that can have animal influenza viruses (birds, pigs). Assuring vaccination against seasonal human influenza in these groups could reduce the overall risk of virus mixing in a patient. However, this would not affect the extensive virus mixing that occurs in various animal species.
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This page is a summary of: Pandemic Seasonal H1N1 Reassortants Recovered from Patient Material Display a Phenotype Similar to That of the Seasonal Parent, Journal of Virology, June 2016, ASM Journals,
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.00772-16.
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