London

An avian flu virus is mutating and becoming more dangerous to mammals, say researchers. The discovery reinforces fears that a pandemic could yet occur in humans.

Bird flu hit the headlines in 1997 when a strain called H5N1 jumped from chickens to people, killing six people in Hong Kong. Within three days, the country's entire chicken population was slaughtered and the outbreak was controlled.

Since then, new strains of virus have emerged, killing 14 more people. As yet, no strain has been able to jump routinely from person to person. But if a more virulent strain evolves, it could trigger widespread outbreaks, potentially affecting millions of people.

Now, genetic and animal studies show the virus poses an increasing threat to mammals. Immediate action is needed to stem the virus's transmission, says Hualan Chen from Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, China, who was involved in the research.

Chen and colleagues studied 21 H5N1 flu virus samples taken from apparently healthy ducks, which act as a natural reservoir for the disease, in southern China between 1999 and 2002. The researchers inoculated groups of chickens, mice and ducks with virus samples from different years. Their results are published this week (H. Chen et al. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. doi:10.1073/pnas.0403212101; 2004).

As expected, the ducks were immune to the virus's effects and the chickens fell sick. However, the mice also became ill, losing weight and the use of their limbs. Crucially, the severity of their illness was linked with the year from which the virus sample was taken. Viruses isolated in 2001 and 2002 made the animals more ill than those isolated earlier on.

The findings hint that some time around 2001 the virus became adept at infecting mammals. Genetic analysis of the same samples reveals that the virus's DNA changed over that time, suggesting that accumulated mutations may have contributed to the increased virulence.

Researchers are concerned that a virus that has acquired the ability to infect mice could also infect humans. “The disease could resurge at any time,” warns virologist Marion Koopmans of the National Institute of Public Health and the Environment in Bilthoven, the Netherlands.

The findings highlight the need for improved surveillance to ensure that any future outbreaks are curtailed, she says. Although domestic poultry are easily culled, wild animals are more difficult to contain. “It is impossible to eradicate the natural reservoir,” says Koopmans, “so we need to learn to live with it.”

But birds may not be the only villains in this story. Chen believes that pigs may also play a part. In Asia, chickens and pigs are often kept in close proximity, so the virus may have shuffled back and forth between the two species, picking up mutations and becoming better at infecting mammalian hosts.