>
Fa   |   Ar   |   En
   Contact Heterogeneity,Rather Than Transmission Efficiency,Limits the Emergence and Spread of Canine Influenza Virus  
   
نویسنده dalziel b.d. ,huang k. ,geoghegan j.l. ,arinaminpathy n. ,dubovi e.j. ,grenfell b.t. ,ellner s.p. ,holmes e.c. ,parrish c.r.
منبع plos pathogens - 2014 - دوره : 10 - شماره : 10
چکیده    Host-range shifts in influenza virus are a major risk factor for pandemics. a key question in the study of emerging zoonoses is how the evolution of transmission efficiency interacts with heterogeneity in contact patterns in the new host species,as this interplay influences disease dynamics and prospects for control. here we use a synergistic mixture of models and data to tease apart the evolutionary and demographic processes controlling a host-range shift in equine h3n8-derived canine influenza virus (civ). civ has experienced 15 years of continuous transfer among dogs in the united states,but maintains a patchy distribution,characterized by sporadic short-lived outbreaks coupled with endemic hotspots in large animal shelters. we show that civ has a high reproductive potential in these facilities (mean r0 = 3.9) and that these hotspots act as refugia from the sparsely connected majority of the dog population. intriguingly,civ has evolved a transmission efficiency that closely matches the minimum required to persist in these refugia,leaving it poised on the extinction/invasion threshold of the host contact network. corresponding phylogenetic analyses show strong geographic clustering in three us regions,and that the effective reproductive number of the virus (re) in the general dog population is close to 1.0. our results highlight the critical role of host contact structure in civ dynamics,and show how host contact networks could shape the evolution of pathogen transmission efficiency. importantly,efficient control measures could eradicate the virus,in turn minimizing the risk of future sustained transmission among companion dogs that could represent a potential new axis to the human-animal interface for influenza. © 2014 dalziel et al.
آدرس department of ecology and evolutionary biology,princeton university,princeton,nj, United States, baker institute for animal health,college of veterinary medicine,cornell university,ithaca,ny, United States, marie bashir institute for infectious diseases and biosecurity,charles perkins centre,school of biological sciences and sydney medical school,university of sydney,sydney,nsw, Australia, department of ecology and evolutionary biology,princeton university,princeton,nj,united states,department of infectious disease epidemiology,school of public health,imperial college london,south kensington campus,london, United Kingdom, department of population medicine and diagnostic sciences,college of veterinary medicine,cornell university,ithaca,ny, United States, department of ecology and evolutionary biology,princeton university,princeton,nj,united states,fogarty international center,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States, department of ecology and evolutionary biology,princeton university,princeton,nj, United States, marie bashir institute for infectious diseases and biosecurity,charles perkins centre,school of biological sciences and sydney medical school,university of sydney,sydney,nsw, Australia, baker institute for animal health,college of veterinary medicine,cornell university,ithaca,ny, United States
 
     
   
Authors
  
 
 

Copyright 2023
Islamic World Science Citation Center
All Rights Reserved