According to a study published in mBio, specific types of avian influenza may cause severe disease in humans.

The work, directed by researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md, found that flu viruses expressing the low pathogenicity avian H1, H6, H7, H10 or H15 hemagglutinins (genes that encode the major surface protein for the virus) led to fatal infections in mice and caused more cell damage in normal human lung cells grown in culture as compared to avian influenza viruses with other subtypes. The 1918 H1 subtype hemagglutinin has been already identified as a key virulence factor in the pandemic influenza virus of 1918. That virus, which caused the so-called “Spanish flu,” spread rapidly around the world, resulting in approximately 50 million deaths.

Get the full story at wwww.sciencedaily.com