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Avian flu strain capable of airborne spread between mammals
The strain was responsbile for an outbreak in mink in 2022.
Study finds strain has mutation that increases airborne transmission.

Researchers assessing a strain of highly pathogenic avian influenza from an outbreak on a mink farm have found that it is capable of limited airborne transmission. It is the first time a subclade 2.3.4.4b H5N1 virus has been shown to spread in this way.

Although the level of airborne transmission was below the level commonly seen in pandemic influenza viruses, the scientists have warned that the findings show the need to continue monitoring the virus due to the risk that it could evolve to cause severe disease in humans.

The strain was responsible for an outbreak in farmed mink in Spain in 2022 that led to all the mink on the farm being culled. There was evidence of mink-to-mink transmission, but at the time it was not known how it was being transmitted.

Using publicly available genetic sequences, the research team at the Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), reconstructed the virus and tested how it spread between ferrets. The researchers chose ferrets as their respiratory tracts share similarities with humans in their susceptibility to infection and transmission.

The researchers found that direct physical contact being an infected and uninfected ferret led to the virus being transmitted in 75 per cent of cases. Where there was no direct contact, but shared airspace, the virus was transmitted in 37.5 per cent of cases.

The virus from the mink farm contained a mutation, called PB2 T271A. When the researchers removed this mutation, airborne transmission was reduced.

Troy Sutton, associate professor of veterinary and biomedical sciences at Penn State, said: “Pandemic influenza viruses typically transmit via the airborne route to 75 per cent to 100 per cent of contacts within three to five days, whereas the mink virus we studied transmitted to fewer than 40 per cent of contacts after nine days.

“The transmission observed in our studies is indicative of increased pandemic potential relative to previously characterised strains of H5N1; however, the mink virus does not exhibit the same attributes as pandemic strains.

“The H5N1 strain affecting cattle also has not caused severe disease in cattle or humans, but the longer the virus circulates, and the more exposure humans have to it, the greater the chances that it will evolve to infect humans.”

The study has been published in the journal Nature Communications.

Image © Shutterstock

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Charities' XL bully neutering scheme closes

News Story 1
 A scheme that helped owners of XL bully dogs with the cost of neutering has closed to new applications due to high demand.

The scheme, run by the RSPCA, Blue Cross, and Battersea, has helped 1,800 dogs and their owners after XL bullies were banned under the Dangerous Dogs Act.

In England and Wales, owners of XL bully dogs which were over one year old on 31 January 2021 have until 30 June 2024 to get their dog neutered. If a dog was between seven months and 12 months old, it must be neutered by 31 December 2024. If it was under seven months old, owners have until 30 June 2025.

More information can be found on the Defra website. 

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News Shorts
Avian flu cattle outbreak spreads to tenth US state

Cattle in two dairy herds in Iowa have tested positive for highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI), making it the tenth state in the USA to be affected by the ongoing outbreak of the disease in cattle.

Since March 2024, more than 80 herds across the USA have been affected by the virus and three dairy workers have tested positive. Authorities have introduced measures to limit the spread of the virus and farmers have been urged to strengthen their biosecurity protocols.

Mike Naig, Iowa secretary of agriculture, said: "Given the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza within dairy cattle in many other states, it is not a surprise that we would have a case given the size of our dairy industry in Iowa.

"While lactating dairy cattle appear to recover with supportive care, we know this destructive virus continues to be deadly for poultry."