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Brief Communications Arising
Nature 440, E8 (27 April 2006) | doi:10.1038/nature04823; Published online 26 April 2006
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Postdoctoral Fellow - Computational Genomics - Team 78 – Ref: 80464
- Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
- Hinxton, Cambridgeshire CB10 1, UK
Postdoctoral Research in Functional Genomics
- Harvard School of Public Health, computer science, biology, bioinformatics,
- Boston, MA
Molecular virology: Was the 1918 pandemic caused by a bird flu?
Mark J. Gibbs1 & Adrian J. Gibbs2
Abstract
Arising from: J. K. Taubenberger et al. Nature 437, 889–893 (2005); see also communication from Antonovics et al.; Taubenberger et al. reply
Taubenberger et al.1 have sequenced the polymerase genes of the pandemic 'Spanish' influenza A virus of 1918, thereby completing the decoding of the genome of this virus2, 3, 4, 5, 6. The authors conclude from these sequences that the virus jumped from birds to humans shortly before the start of the pandemic and that it was not derived from earlier viruses by gene shuffling, a process called reassortment. However, we believe that their evidence does not convincingly support these conclusions and that some of their results even indicate that, on the contrary, the virus evolved in mammals before the pandemic began and that it was a reassortant. In light of this alternative interpretation, we suggest that the current intense surveillance of influenza viruses should be broadened to include mammalian sources.
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