Dogs Can Carry Mutant Flu Strains

Mutant strains of a common human flu virus have been found in dogs for the first time, prompting concerns that such viruses could start to spread easily among pets—and potentially evolve into dangerous new strains that jump back to humans.

Nanjing Agricultural University virologist Shuo Su and his colleagues identified two dogs in southern China with different mutant strains of the influenza C virus, which infects almost all humans—mostly as children—and usually causes mild illness.

The researchers genetically sequenced these strains and found that mutations affected their structure near the part that binds to a host’s cells. These changes mean “it might be on the way to replicate better in dogs,” says Freie Universität Berlin biochemist Michael Veit, a co-author on the new work. People sometimes pass flu viruses to a pet dog, where the contagion typically stops. But the newly found strains’ particular mutations suggest that they more likely spread from dog to dog, Veit says.

Although most adults have already been exposed to influenza C, the researchers say we might have little immunity against a new strain that jumps back to humans after mutating in animals. For a letter published in the Journal of Infectionthe scientists describe this finding and say it shows that viruses should be tracked more thoroughly in dogs and other pets through regular testing and sequencing. Cornell University animal virologist Colin Parrish, who was not involved in the study, says he would “certainly advocate” for that.

“We have sort of ignored dogs and cats as potential reservoirs or intermediate hosts,” he says. The U.S. has no formal monitoring programs for viruses in pets, but Parrish’s research group routinely surveys dogs for new respiratory viruses.

Two flu viruses are known to spread among dogs around the world: one that jumped from horses and one from birds. In southern China, there are also reports of dogs spreading flu strains from pigs, suggesting the region could be an unusual hotspot for viruses in dogs.

It is too early to say whether dog-borne influenza C will become a problem. More studies are needed to confirm the virus is spreading among these animals and, if so, how easily. But the researchers say it and other viruses should be monitored carefully to catch any emerging disease strains. Increasing surveillance “could be done really, really simply,” Parrish says.

A good place to start would be kennels and similar places where viruses can easily spread and evolve, says University of Nottingham virologist Janet Daly, who was also not involved in the new study. “If you are keeping or farming animals at high density,” she says, “that’s where you need to look.”

This article was originally published with the title “Pet Viruses” in Scientific American 328, 4, 15 (April 2023)

doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0423-15

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)

    Ida Emilie Steinmark is a freelance science journalist based in City. Follow her on Twitter @IEmSteinmark

    Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

    Related Posts
    Mountain Glaciers Have Less Ice than Previously Thought thumbnail

    Mountain Glaciers Have Less Ice than Previously Thought

    Many of the world’s glaciers contain significantly less ice than scientists previously estimated. That means some mountain communities that rely on melting ice may run out of fresh water faster, according to new research. Glaciers in the Andes Mountains of South America, in particular, may contain far less ice than previous studies suggested. That means…
    Read More
    What would happen to the human body moving at near lightspeed? thumbnail

    What would happen to the human body moving at near lightspeed?

    In science fiction, spaceships moving at or beyond lightspeed enable all manner of universal exploration. But in Earth-bound reality, traveling at the speed of light (299,792,458 meters per second, or 670,616,629 miles per hour, in a vacuum) in a clunky rocket is a physical impossibility. “It’s the speed at which massless things travel,” says Gerd
    Read More
    Antiaging Vaccine Shown in Mice thumbnail

    Antiaging Vaccine Shown in Mice

    A vaccine has been used that helps the body remove zombie cells in some types of tissue in mice. This is initial work that could lead to a better solution to one of the seven major types of aging damage. Drugs that treat this aging damage problem are called senolytics. Fightaging describes the recent work…
    Read More
    Moderna: Initial booster data shows good results on omicron thumbnail

    Moderna: Initial booster data shows good results on omicron

    Associated PressDec. 20, 2021Updated: Dec. 20, 2021 1:49 p.m.FILE - A vial of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine is seen during a vaccination clinic at the Norristown Public Health Center in Norristown, Pa., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2021. Moderna said Monday, Dec. 20, 2021 that a booster dose of its COVID-19 vaccine should offer protection against the rapidly…
    Read More
    Exploring the Alzheimer’s brain thumbnail

    Exploring the Alzheimer’s brain

    For the first time, scientists studying Alzheimer’s disease have mapped the structure of molecules in a human brain. Published in Nature, the study used cryo-electron tomography, guided by fluorescence microscopy, to explore inside an Alzheimer’s donor brain. This provided 3D maps to observe proteins, the tiny building blocks of life, within the brain, a million
    Read More
    Index Of News
    Total
    0
    Share