Publication | Open Access
Laboratory characterization of a swine influenza virus isolated from a fatal case of human influenza
89
Citations
22
References
1989
Year
Swine Influenza VirusViral EvolutionViral DiagnosticsEmerging Infectious DiseasesRna FingerprintingImmunologyLaboratory CharacterizationPathologyVirologyHuman InfluenzaSeptember 1988Influenza VaccineEnzootic Swine VirusesPorcine DiseaseSwine VirusVirus PhylogenyMedicineAnimal Virus
A swine influenza virus-like type A (H1N1) virus, designated A/Wisconsin/3523/88, was isolated in September 1988 from a Wisconsin woman who had died with primary viral pneumonia. Antigenic analyses with hemagglutinin-specific monoclonal antibodies and postinfection ferret serum indicated that the hemagglutinin of A/Wisconsin/3523/88 was antigenically closely related to viruses currently circulating in swine. Genetic analysis of the A/Wisconsin/3523/88 virus by RNA fingerprinting and partial RNA sequence analysis of seven of the eight segments indicated that the genome of the human isolate was similar to that of enzootic swine viruses. These laboratory data supported the epidemiologic findings that this human infection occurred by transmission of an enzootic swine influenza virus and that the virus showed no major genetic changes potentially related to increased pathogenesis.
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