H5N1
— why it can't spread between people
Catherine
Brahic
22 March 2006
Source: SciDev.Net
Researchers have suggested why the H5N1 bird flu virus has so
far been inefficient at infecting people and unable to spread
between them.
In
papers published tomorrow (23 March) by Nature and Science, they
say the virus may be physically unable to reach vulnerable cells
deep inside human lungs.
Although
H5N1 is very good at spreading through large populations of birds,
it has infected fewer than 200 people since 2003.
The
virus has killed about half of those infected and could spark
a devastating human flu pandemic if it mutates to spread easily
between people.
For
this to happen, it would need to be able to attach to, infect
and replicate in human cells. After multiplying, coughs and sneezes
would spread the virus to other people.
But
this week's findings show that the virus is rarely able to attach
to cells in the upper respiratory tract.
What's
more, it seems that mucus could be trapping the virus, which is
then expelled before it can replicate, says Thijs Kuiken of the
Erasmus Medical Centre in the Netherlands.
While
H5N1 cannot enter cells close to the nose and mouth, both Kuiken's
team and another led by Yoshihiro Kawaoka, of the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in the United States, found cells deep inside
the human lungs that the H5N1 virus can bind to — if it is able
to get that far.
This
fits neatly with observations made during autopsies of people
killed by the virus: that most damage was deep in lung tissue.
Kuiken's
team found that while H5N1 also attaches to cells deep in cat
and ferret lungs, it tends to bind to cells higher up the respiratory
tracts of mice.
This,
they say, suggests that cat and ferrets would make better research
subjects than mice in studies of how H5N1 may infect and cause
disease in people.
Link
to full paper by Kuiken et al. in Science
Reference:
Science doi: 10.11126/science.1125548
Link
to full paper by Kawaoka et al. in Nature
Reference:
Nature 440, 435 (2006)