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Featured researches published by Guangpeng Ma.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2009

Emergence of European Avian Influenza Virus-Like H1N1 Swine Influenza A Viruses in China

Jinhua Liu; Yuhai Bi; Kun Qin; Guanghua Fu; Jun Yang; Jinshan Peng; Guangpeng Ma; Qinfang Liu; Juan Pu; Fulin Tian

ABSTRACT During swine influenza surveillance from 2007 to 2008, 10 H1N1 viruses were isolated and analyzed for their antigenic and phylogenetic properties. Our study revealed the emergence of avian-origin European H1N1 swine influenza virus in China, which highlights the necessity of swine influenza surveillance for potential pandemic preparedness.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2010

Novel swine influenza virus reassortants in pigs, China.

Yuhai Bi; Guanghua Fu; Jing Chen; Jinshan Peng; Yipeng Sun; Jingjing Wang; Juan Pu; Yi Zhang; Huijie Gao; Guangpeng Ma; Fulin Tian; Ian H. Brown; Jinhua Liu

During swine influenza virus surveillance in pigs in China during 2006–2009, we isolated subtypes H1N1, H1N2, and H3N2 and found novel reassortment between contemporary swine and avian panzootic viruses. These reassortment events raise concern about generation of novel viruses in pigs, which could have pandemic potential.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Acute respiratory distress syndrome induced by a swine 2009 H1N1 variant in mice.

Yi Zhang; Honglei Sun; Lihong Fan; Yuan Ma; Yipeng Sun; Juan Pu; Jun Yang; Jian Qiao; Guangpeng Ma; Jinhua Liu

Background Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) induced by pandemic 2009 H1N1 influenza virus has been widely reported and was considered the main cause of death in critically ill patients with 2009 H1N1 infection. However, no animal model has been developed for ARDS caused by infection with 2009 H1N1 virus. Here, we present a mouse model of ARDS induced by 2009 H1N1 virus. Methodology Principal Findings Mice were inoculated with A/swine/Shandong/731/2009 (SD/09), which was a 2009 H1N1 influenza variant with a G222D mutation in the hemagglutinin. Clinical symptoms were recorded every day. Lung injury was assessed by lung water content and histopathological observation. Arterial blood gas, leukocyte count in the bronchial alveolar lavage fluid and blood, virus titers, and cytokine levels in the lung were measured at various times post-inoculation. Mice infected with SD/09 virus showed typical ARDS symptoms characterized by 60% lethality on days 8–10 post-inoculation, highly edematous lungs, inflammatory cellular infiltration, alveolar and interstitial edema, lung hemorrhage, progressive and severe hypoxemia, and elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Conclusions/Significance These results suggested that we successfully established an ARDS mouse model induced by a virulent 2009 H1N1 variant without previous adaptation, which may be of benefit for evaluating the pathogenesis or therapy of human ARDS caused by 2009 H1N1 virus.


Journal of Virology | 2014

Influenza A Virus Acquires Enhanced Pathogenicity and Transmissibility after Serial Passages in Swine

Kai Wei; Honglei Sun; Zhenhong Sun; Yipeng Sun; Weili Kong; Juan Pu; Guangpeng Ma; Yanbo Yin; Hanchun Yang; Xin Guo; Kin-Chow Chang; Jinhua Liu

ABSTRACT Genetic and phylogenetic analyses suggest that the pandemic H1N1/2009 virus was derived from well-established swine influenza lineages; however, there is no convincing evidence that the pandemic virus was generated from a direct precursor in pigs. Furthermore, the evolutionary dynamics of influenza virus in pigs have not been well documented. Here, we subjected a recombinant virus (rH1N1) with the same constellation makeup as the pandemic H1N1/2009 virus to nine serial passages in pigs. The severity of infection sequentially increased with each passage. Deep sequencing of viral quasispecies from the ninth passage found five consensus amino acid mutations: PB1 A469T, PA 1129T, NA N329D, NS1 N205K, and NEP T48N. Mutations in the hemagglutinin (HA) protein, however, differed greatly between the upper and lower respiratory tracts. Three representative viral clones with the five consensus mutations were selected for functional evaluation. Relative to the parental virus, the three viral clones showed enhanced replication and polymerase activity in vitro and enhanced replication, pathogenicity, and transmissibility in pigs, guinea pigs, and ferrets in vivo. Specifically, two mutants of rH1N1 (PB1 A469T and a combination of NS1 N205K and NEP T48N) were identified as determinants of transmissibility in guinea pigs. Crucially, one mutant viral clone with the five consensus mutations, which also carried D187E, K211E, and S289N mutations in its HA, additionally was able to infect ferrets by airborne transmission as effectively as the pandemic virus. Our findings demonstrate that influenza virus can acquire viral characteristics that are similar to those of the pandemic virus after limited serial passages in pigs. IMPORTANCE We demonstrate here that an engineered reassortant swine influenza virus, with the same gene constellation pattern as the pandemic H1N1/2009 virus and subjected to only nine serial passages in pigs, acquired greatly enhanced virulence and transmissibility. In particular, one representative pathogenic passaged virus clone, which carried three mutations in the HA gene and five consensus mutations in PB1, PA, NA, NS1, and NEP genes, additionally was able to confer respiratory droplet transmission as effectively as the pandemic H1N1/2009 virus. Our findings suggest that pigs can readily induce adaptive mutational changes to a precursor pandemic-like virus to transform it into a highly virulent and infectious form akin to that of the pandemic H1N1/2009 virus, which underlines the potential direct role of pigs in promoting influenza A virus pathogenicity and transmissibility.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Characterization of an Artificial Swine-Origin Influenza Virus with the Same Gene Combination as H1N1/2009 Virus: A Genesis Clue of Pandemic Strain

Xueli Zhao; Yipeng Sun; Juan Pu; Lihong Fan; Weimin Shi; Yanxin Hu; Jun Yang; Qi Xu; Jingjing Wang; Dongjun Hou; Guangpeng Ma; Jinhua Liu

Pandemic H1N1/2009 influenza virus, derived from a reassortment of avian, human, and swine influenza viruses, possesses a unique gene segment combination that had not been detected previously in animal and human populations. Whether such a gene combination could result in the pathogenicity and transmission as H1N1/2009 virus remains unclear. In the present study, we used reverse genetics to construct a reassortant virus (rH1N1) with the same gene combination as H1N1/2009 virus (NA and M genes from a Eurasian avian-like H1N1 swine virus and another six genes from a North American triple-reassortant H1N2 swine virus). Characterization of rH1N1 in mice showed that this virus had higher replicability and pathogenicity than those of the seasonal human H1N1 and Eurasian avian-like swine H1N1 viruses, but was similar to the H1N1/2009 and triple-reassortant H1N2 viruses. Experiments performed on guinea pigs showed that rH1N1 was not transmissible, whereas pandemic H1N1/2009 displayed efficient transmissibility. To further determine which gene segment played a key role in transmissibility, we constructed a series of reassortants derived from rH1N1 and H1N1/2009 viruses. Direct contact transmission studies demonstrated that the HA and NS genes contributed to the transmission of H1N1/2009 virus. Second, the HA gene of H1N1/2009 virus, when combined with the H1N1/2009 NA gene, conferred efficient contact transmission among guinea pigs. The present results reveal that not only gene segment reassortment but also amino acid mutation were needed for the generation of the pandemic influenza virus.


Virus Research | 2014

Hemagglutinin mutation D222N of the 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus alters receptor specificity without affecting virulence in mice

Weili Kong; Linqing Liu; Yu Wang; Huijie Gao; Kai Wei; Honglei Sun; Yipeng Sun; Jinhua Liu; Guangpeng Ma; Juan Pu

The D222N hemagglutinin (HA) mutation within the receptor-binding site was detected with higher frequencies in severe cases of 2009 pandemic H1N1 (pdmH1N1) infections. The impact of this mutation was investigated in vitro and in vivo using recombinant viruses. The recombinant D222N virus grew to significantly lower viral titers than the WT in A549 but not in MDCK cells. A dose-dependent glycan array analysis with the D222N virus showed a modest increase in the binding avidity to human-like (α-2,6 sialylated glycan) receptors and avian-like (α-2,3 sialylated glycan) receptors than the WT virus. The D222N HA mutation resulted in slight weight loss, lower lung titers, inflammatory cytokines and alveolar inflammation in mice than the WT virus. This may or may not be associated with severe clinical outcomes reported in humans.


Journal of Molecular and Genetic Medicine | 2009

Improved and simplified recombineering approach for influenza virus reverse genetics

Qinfang Liu; Shuai Wang; Guangpeng Ma; Juan Pu; Nicole E. Forbes; Earl G. Brown; Jinhua Liu


Virus Genes | 2010

Establishment of a multiplex RT-PCR assay to detect different lineages of swine H1 and H3 influenza A viruses

Guanghua Fu; Mengda Liu; Wenshu Zeng; Juan Pu; Yuhai Bi; Guangpeng Ma; Jinhua Liu


Archive | 2009

Influenza A virus ELISA nucleoprotein capture antigen diagnose reagent kit and special monoclonal antibody therefor

Jinhua Liu; Chunmei Yan; Guangpeng Ma; Juan Pu; Qinfang Liu


Archive | 2009

Carrier of reverse gene system for construction of influenza virus and application thereof

Jinhua Liu; Qinfang Liu; Guangpeng Ma; Juan Pu; Shuai Wang

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Jinhua Liu

China Agricultural University

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Juan Pu

China Agricultural University

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Qinfang Liu

China Agricultural University

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Yipeng Sun

China Agricultural University

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Guanghua Fu

China Agricultural University

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Honglei Sun

China Agricultural University

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Jun Yang

China Agricultural University

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Shuai Wang

China Agricultural University

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Chunmei Yan

China Agricultural University

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Huijie Gao

China Agricultural University

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