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An influenza A (H1N1) virus, closely related to swine influenza virus,
responsible for a fatal case of human influenza.
Department of Pathobiological Sciences and Veterinary
Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53706.
In July 1991, an influenza A virus, designated
A/Maryland/12/91 (A/MD), was isolated from the bronchial secretions of a
27-year-old animal caretaker. He had been admitted to the hospital with
bilateral pneumonia and died of acute respiratory distress syndrome 13 days
later. Antigenic analyses with postinfection ferret antisera and monoclonal
antibodies to recent H1 swine hemagglutinins indicated that the hemagglutinin
of this virus was antigenically related to, but distinguishable from, those of
other influenza A (H1N1) viruses currently circulating in swine.
Oligonucleotide mapping of total viral RNAs revealed differences between A/MD
and other contemporary swine viruses. However, partial sequencing of each RNA
segment of A/MD demonstrated that all segments were related to those of
currently circulating swine viruses. Sequence analysis of the entire
hemagglutinin, nucleoprotein, and matrix genes of A/MD revealed a high level
of identity with other contemporary swine viruses. Our studies on A/MD
emphasize that H1N1 viruses in pigs obviously continue to cross species
barriers and infect humans.
PMID: 8138990 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
PMCID: PMC236678
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Cited by PubMed Central articles