Text Only
Search

 
Scientists Learn Why Bird Flu Does Not Easily Infect People


22 March 2006

Chickens in their enclosure in Frankfurt, Germany
 
Scientists have learned why the deadly H5N1 bird flu does not easily infect people and spread between them.  They have discovered a biological barrier that has so far prevented a feared human pandemic.

Avian influenza has infected nearly 200 people worldwide and killed about half of them. Each documented case has been the result of close contact with infected birds. But the virus does not easily jump from birds to humans and there are no known cases of spread between humans.

The answer to this biological mystery is now revealed by Dutch and Japanese scientists working independently of each other and reporting respectively in the journals "Science" and "Nature.". They say that the H5N1 virus attaches to and enters cells too deep down in human lungs to spread easily by coughing and sneezing. The leader of the Dutch research team, Thijs Kuiken of Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, says this contrasts with human influenza strains, which attach to cells in the nose and throat and are easily transmitted from person to person.

"Being able to attach higher up in the respiratory tract may mean, we're not sure, but it may mean that it comes more easy for such a person to become infected in the first place, and in the second place to transmit the virus to another person," Kuiken says.

Kuiken's team and one led by University of Wisconsin virus expert Yoshihiro Kawaoka with colleagues in Tokyo made their discovery by studying tissue removed from various parts of the human respiratory tract.

In addition to explaining why people do not spread H5N1 bird flu, their finding explains why transmission is relatively rare from birds to humans.  The H5N1 virus enters birds in a different part of the respiratory tract.  A protein on the viral surface recognizes binding points in birds' upper respiratory system, or windpipe, locations it does not recognize in the human breathing passageway.

The Dutch scientist says the research also tells us why the death rate is so high, about 50 percent, among people who have been infected with the H5N1 avian flu virus.

"They explain to us why in the few cases where humans have been infected with the H5N1 virus, the main lesion is seen in the lungs, and often people that have the H5N1 virus get a severe pneumonia and can even die from it," Kuiken says.

Kuiken says that for the H5N1 virus to infect people in a higher part of the breathing passage and ease transmissibility, it would have to mutate. The new studies do not indicate how likely such a mutation would be.

He and the Japanese scientists point out that by using their laboratory techniques, researchers can monitor viruses isolated from humans infected with bird flu to determine if the viral binding protein is indeed changing in a way that would threaten a human pandemic. 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Bird Flu Reported in Gaza Strip
African Bird Flu Conference Fails to Discuss Human Infection
WHO Expects China to Deliver Long-Awaited Bird Flu Samples
 
  Top Story
Soldiers, Family Come Together To Grieve at Fort Hood  Video clip available

  More Stories
Obama Pays Tribute to Fort Hood Shooting Victims   Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
Details Emerge About Alleged Fort Hood Shooter  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
Washington Area Sniper Executed
Bomb Rocks Northwestern Pakistan
China Ready to Welcome President Obama  Video clip available
US Urges North Korea Not to Escalate Tensions in Yellow Sea
British PM Defends Military Mission in Afghanistan  Audio Clip Available
Lebanon's Unity Government Convenes for First Time
Tropical Storm Ida Downgraded; Moves Inland
Report: Africa's Disappearing Wetlands Produce 'Alarming' Levels of Greenhouse Gas
IEA Urges Action on Climate Change
Somali Pirates Deny Arms Seizure  Audio Clip Available
Cross-Examination Begins in War Crimes Trial of Former Liberian President  Audio Clip Available
US Development of H1N1 Vaccine Hits Snag  Video clip available
Asia to Welcome President Obama  Video clip available
Obama Makes First China Tour as Economic Interdependence Grows  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
APEC Marks 20 Years, Looks to Future of Regional Trade  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges 'Compassion' for Americans Detained in Iran  Audio Clip Available
World War II Museum Expansion Aims at Younger Generations  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
North Carolina World War II Veterans Honored in Washington  Video clip available