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DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030300
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Whole-Genome Analysis of Human Influenza A Virus Reveals Multiple Persistent Lineages and Reassortment among Recent H3N2 Viruses

Edward C. Holmes,Elodie Ghedin,Naomi Miller,Jill Taylor,Yīmíng Bào,Kirsten St. George,Bryan T. Grenfell,Steven L. Salzberg,Claire M. Fraser,David J. Lipman,Jeffery K. Taubenberger

Reassortment
Biology
Hemagglutinin (influenza)
2005
Understanding the evolution of influenza A viruses in humans is important for surveillance and vaccine strain selection. We performed a phylogenetic analysis of 156 complete genomes of human H3N2 influenza A viruses collected between 1999 and 2004 from New York State, United States, and observed multiple co-circulating clades with different population frequencies. Strikingly, phylogenies inferred for individual gene segments revealed that multiple reassortment events had occurred among these clades, such that one clade of H3N2 viruses present at least since 2000 had provided the hemagglutinin gene for all those H3N2 viruses sampled after the 2002-2003 influenza season. This reassortment event was the likely progenitor of the antigenically variant influenza strains that caused the A/Fujian/411/2002-like epidemic of the 2003-2004 influenza season. However, despite sharing the same hemagglutinin, these phylogenetically distinct lineages of viruses continue to co-circulate in the same population. These data, derived from the first large-scale analysis of H3N2 viruses, convincingly demonstrate that multiple lineages can co-circulate, persist, and reassort in epidemiologically significant ways, and underscore the importance of genomic analyses for future influenza surveillance.
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    Whole-Genome Analysis of Human Influenza A Virus Reveals Multiple Persistent Lineages and Reassortment among Recent H3N2 Viruses” is a paper by Edward C. Holmes Elodie Ghedin Naomi Miller Jill Taylor Yīmíng Bào Kirsten St. George Bryan T. Grenfell Steven L. Salzberg Claire M. Fraser David J. Lipman Jeffery K. Taubenberger published in 2005. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.