WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 (Xinhua) -- Researchers have
discovered that influenza hemagglutinin -- a type of protein found on the
surface of influenza viruses that is used to bind to host cells - appears to
play an important role in the virus's ability to transmit efficiently among
humans.
The findings are published on Thursday on the online
early edition of journal Science. Terrence M. Tumpey at U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention and coauthors studied the hemagglutinin protein covering
the surface of the 1918 influenza virus that they recreated in 2005. That virus
caused a pandemic that claimed the lives of at least 50 million people between
1918 and 1920, and that virus shows genetic sequence similarities to avian
influenza viruses.
Researchers changed two amino acids -- basic building
blocks of protein -- in the 1918 virus hemagglutinin from a mammalian
configuration to an avian configuration and inoculated ferrets with it.
Ferrets are expected to be good predictors of
influenza virus transmissibility among humans. Inoculation of ferrets with the
1918 "avian" hemagglutinin virus caused severe disease, but healthy ferrets
placed close enough to the sick ferrets to catch it remained healthy.
The findings suggest that for an influenza virus to
spread efficiently, its hemagglutinin must prefer attaching to host cells that
are found in the human upper airway instead of host cells found predominantly in
birds.
The transmission ability among humans is an essential
property of a pandemic virus. Understanding flu transmission will assist
researchers in their challenge to stop the spread of influenza, especially as
concerns mount with the current avian flu epidemic in chickens and the
possibility that it will spread to humans.