Three decades of #discovery: An overview of #Hendra virus, the original #Henipavirus

 


Abstract

Hendra virus (HeV) emerged in Australia in 1994, causing a devastating outbreak among horses in Brisbane with spread to humans, resulting in one death. This nonsegmented, negative-stranded RNA virus belongs to the family Paramyxoviridae and represents the first zoonotic paramyxovirus isolated from bats. Flying foxes (genus Pteropus) serve as the natural reservoir, with all four mainland Australian species carrying antibodies with no apparent disease. HeV initiates infection by binding ephrin-B2 receptors on vascular endothelial cells, driving characteristic pathology involving vasculitis, thrombosis, and neurological complications. Horses are amplifying hosts, shedding virus abundantly in respiratory secretions and posing transmission risks to humans during invasive procedures. To date, seven confirmed human infections have been documented, with a 57% fatality rate, presenting as severe respiratory disease or progressive encephalitis. Two genetic variants are now recognized: the original HeV genotype 1 and the emerging HeV genotype 2, identified in limited equine cases. Recent surveillance of bat roosts revealed substantial viral diversity, with peak shedding occurring during winter—coinciding with equine spillover peaks. Prevention integrates multiple strategies: the licensed equine vaccine Equivac which provides One Health protection for both horses and human contacts; biosecurity measures including proper PPE; and habitat restoration to reduce nutritional stress in bat populations. Emerging therapeutics include monoclonal antibodies, with m102.4 showing cross-protective activity against both HeV and the closely related Nipah virus. No licensed human vaccines currently exist, though candidates are in development. Future prevention strategies increasingly recognize the importance of Indigenous-led conservation approaches alongside biomedical interventions. This review will focus on the history of HeV, virus replication and diversity, epidemiology, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, treatment, prevention, as well as ecological and interdisciplinary countermeasures.


Author summary

Hendra virus (HeV) was first detected in 1994, with two outbreaks occurring within 2 months of that year. One was the index outbreak in the Brisbane suburb of Hendra, and the other was retrospectively diagnosed in the following year. This review examines the discoveries that have been made in the 30 years since its discovery.

Source: 


Link: https://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article?id=10.1371/journal.pntd.0014138

____

#USA, #Wastewater Data for Avian #Influenza #H5 (#CDC, March 27 '26)

 


{Excerpt}

(...)

Time Period: March 15, 2026 - March 21, 2026

-- H5 Detection9 site(s) (2.0%)

-- No Detection436 site(s) (98.0%)

-- No samples in last week130 site(s)




(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.cdc.gov/nwss/rv/wwd-h5.html

_____

#UK, #England: Notified cases of invasive #meningococcal disease - Updated 27 March 2026 (UKHSA, edited)

 


{Excerpt}

(...)

Daily case figures

-- The number of confirmed and probable cases can change when:

- a case is laboratory confirmed

- when the clinical assessment changes, including when new laboratory results are available

- when further epidemiological information is available

-- The figures in Table 1 cannot be used to identify the number of new confirmed or probable cases from one day to the next. This also applies to total cases.


Table 1. Cases of invasive meningococcal disease linked to Canterbury, Kent by day from 16 March 2026

[Date - Total outbreak confirmed cases - Outbreak confirmed MenB cases (subset of total outbreak confirmed cases) - Outbreak confirmed MenB cases with outbreak strain (subset of outbreak confirmed MenB cases) - Outbreak probable cases - Total outbreak cases]

* 26 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 1 - 21

* 25 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 2 - 22

* 24 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 2 - 22

* 23 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 3 - 23

* 22 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - [note 1] - 9 - 29

* 21 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - [note 1] - 9 - 29

* 20 March 2026 - 23 - 18 - [note 1] - 11 - 34

* 19 March 2026 - 18 - 13 - [note 1] - 11 - 29

* 18 March 2026 - 15 - 9 - [note 1] - 12 - 27

* 17 March 2026 - 9 - 6 - [note 1] - 11 - 20

* 16 March 2026 - [note 1] - 4 - [note 1] - [note 1] - 1

__

Note 1: Information not reported

Note 2: A case initially classified as a confirmed case may be reclassified or discarded when further laboratory results and clinical information is available. This applies to situations where:

- further testing (including results from specialist reference laboratories) rules out meningococcal disease

and 

- there is an alternative diagnosis or where the clinical picture is no longer consistent with meningococcal infection

__

Note: The case numbers presented in Table 1 were confirmed at specific times of day for each of the releases: 16 March 2026 verified at 5:00pm, 17 March 2026 verified at 3:00pm, 18 March 2026 onwards verified at 12:30pm.

-- There have been 2 deaths since the start of the incident.

(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/invasive-meningococcal-disease-statistical-releases/notified-cases-of-invasive-meningococcal-disease

____

#Finland - #Influenza A #H5N1 viruses of high pathogenicity (Inf. with) (non-poultry including wild birds) (2017-) - Immediate notification

 


Two wild Canada Geese in the Lounais-Suomen aluehallintovirasto Region.

Source: 


Link: https://wahis.woah.org/#/in-review/7401

____

The temporal #sequence of #influenza #H1N1 and #Mycoplasma pneumoniae co-infection causes disease severity in Syrian hamster models

 


Abstract

Introduction

Influenza H1N1 virus is one of the most prevalent subtypes among influenza viruses, and co-infection with Mycoplasma pneumoniae (Mp) is frequently documented in clinical respiratory infections. However, the pathological mechanisms underlying the temporal sequence of H1N1-Mp co-infection remain poorly characterized, and relevant animal models are lacking.

Methods

In this study, we established a model of influenza H1N1 and Mycoplasma pneumoniae co-infection in Syrian hamsters and infected two pathogens in interval of 72 hours. Clinical manifestations, body temperature, body weight, pathogen loads in nasal, pharyngeal, and anal swabs, as well as blood cytokine profiles were dynamically monitored over 14 days post-infection (dpi). Additionally, tissue pathogen loads, histopathological changes, routine blood parameters, and blood biochemistry indicators were evaluated at 7 and 14 dpi.

Results

The results demonstrated that hamsters first infected with H1N1 followed by Mp (F-M group) exhibited significantly more severe histopathological lesions (assessed by HE staining), higher pathogen loads, and dysregulated cytokine responses compared to other infection groups.

Conclusion

Our findings highlight the critical role of infection order in determining the severity of H1N1-Mp co-infection, providing novel insights into the temporal dynamics and pathogenic mechanisms of respiratory co-infections.

Source: 


Link: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2026.1787294/full

____

#Evolution and viral properties of the #SARS-CoV-2 #BA32 #subvariant

 


Abstract

The SARS-CoV-2 Omicron subvariant BA.3.2 descends from BA.3. It emerged two years after BA.3 ceased to circulate and differs by 39 spike mutations from BA.3. Similar to BA.2.86, which circulated at low levels before giving rise to JN.1, BA.3.2 shows a low but persistent circulation globally. Here, we characterize the phylogenetic origin, infection in cell culture, and neutralization of BA.3.2 using live virus and blood plasma samples collected in South Africa at different stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. Like the Omicron BA.2.86 subvariant, we find that BA.3.2 likely emerged in Southern Africa. We also find that an 871 bp deletion removed ORF7 and ORF8. In H1299-ACE2 cells, BA.3.2 has lower cytotoxicity measured as plaque area compared to ancestral SARS-CoV-2 but similar to the co-circulating LP.8.1 Omicron subvariant with which it also shares similar replication and infection focus size. BA.3.2 and LP.8.1 exhibit complete escape from neutralization from pre-Omicron collected plasma samples, have low levels of neutralization by plasma collected in 2024, and higher neutralization by plasma collected in 2025, with BA.3.2 showing moderately lower neutralization than LP.8.1. The emergence of long branch subvariants like BA.3.2 without intermediates likely indicates that unmonitored persistent infections continue to drive large evolutionary shifts in this virus.

Source: 


Link: https://academic.oup.com/ve/article/12/1/veag011/8490867

____

#Mpox - cMulti-country external #situation #report no. 64, published 26 March 2026 (#WHO, summary)

 


{Excerpt}

Highlights

Transmission of mpox continues mostly within sexual networks, affecting both women and men, followed by household transmission, and in some historically endemic areas, affecting all age groups. 

- All clades of monkeypox virus (MPXV) continue to circulate. 

- Unless mpox outbreaks are rapidly contained and human-to-human transmission is interrupted, there is a risk of sustained community transmission in all settings. 

In February 2026, 46 countries across all WHO regions reported a total of 1184 confirmed mpox cases, including four deaths (case fatality ratio [CFR] 0.3%). 

- Of these cases, 58.6% were reported in the WHO African Region

Four WHO regions – the Region of the Americas and the African, South-East Asian and Western Pacific regions – reported a decline in confirmed cases in February, compared to January 2026, while the European Region reported an increase in confirmed cases

- The Eastern Mediterranean Region reported the same monthly case count in January and February 2026.

Seventeen countries in Africa reported active transmission of mpox in the last six weeks (1 February – 15 March 2026), with 907 confirmed cases, including seven deaths (CFR 0.8%). 

- Countries reporting the highest number of cases in this period are Madagascar, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Burundi, and Liberia

Three countries, Argentina, Austria, and the Central African Republic, have reported mpox due to clade Ib MPXV for the first time. 

Outside Africa, community transmission of clade Ib MPXV continues in the WHO European Region, with Austria, Belgium, Portugal, Spain, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland reporting community transmission, including in sexual networks of men who have sex with men.  

This report provides an update on mpox outbreak transmission dynamics across different clades and settings. 

On 7 April 2026, World Health Day, WHO will join a One Health summit convened by the Government of France. 

- The Summit will foster international and interdisciplinary dialogue to highlight the interdependence of human, animal, plant and ecosystem health, and the need for coordinated, science-based approaches to address shared health threats, including for emergency response. 

(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.who.int/publications/m/item/multi-country-outbreak-of-mpox--external-situation-report--64---26-march-2026

____

#UK, #England: Notified cases of invasive #meningococcal disease - Updated 26 March 2026 (UKHSA, edited)



{Excerpt}

(...) 


Daily case figures

-- The number of confirmed and probable cases can change when:

- a case is laboratory confirmed

- when the clinical assessment changes, including when new laboratory results are available

- when further epidemiological information is available

-- The figures in Table 1 cannot be used to identify the number of new confirmed or probable cases from one day to the next. This also applies to total cases.


Table 1. Cases of invasive meningococcal disease linked to Canterbury, Kent by day from 16 March 2026

[Date - Total outbreak confirmed cases - Outbreak confirmed MenB cases (subset of total outbreak confirmed cases) - Outbreak confirmed MenB cases with outbreak strain (subset of outbreak confirmed MenB cases) - Outbreak probable cases - Total outbreak cases]

* 25 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 2 - 22

* 24 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 2 - 22

* 23 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 3 - 23

* 22 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - [note 1] - 9 - 29

* 21 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - [note 1] - 9 - 29

* 20 March 2026 - 23 - 18 - [note 1] - 11 - 34

* 19 March 2026 - 18 - 13 - [note 1] - 11 - 29

* 18 March 2026 - 15 - 9 - [note 1] - 12 - 27

* 17 March 2026 - 9 - 6 - [note 1] - 11 - 20

* 16 March 2026 - [note 1] - 4 - [note 1] - [note 1] - 1

__

Note 1: Information not reported

Note 2: A case initially classified as a confirmed case may be reclassified or discarded when further laboratory results and clinical information is available. This applies to situations where:

- further testing (including results from specialist reference laboratories) rules out meningococcal disease

and 

- there is an alternative diagnosis or where the clinical picture is no longer consistent with meningococcal infection

__

Note: The case numbers presented in Table 1 were confirmed at specific times of day for each of the releases: 16 March 2026 verified at 5:00pm, 17 March 2026 verified at 3:00pm, 18 March 2026 onwards verified at 12:30pm.

-- There have been 2 deaths since the start of the incident.

(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/invasive-meningococcal-disease-statistical-releases/notified-cases-of-invasive-meningococcal-disease

____

Deciphering #HPAI #Influenza A Virus #H5N1: Molecular Basis of #Pathogenicity, Zoonotic Potential, and Advances in #Vaccination Strategies

 


Abstract

The ongoing panzootic of the highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 virus, dominated by clade 2.3.4.4b, constitutes a significant global threat to wildlife, animal health, and public health. Once characterized by sporadic outbreaks, H5N1 has evolved into a sustained, year-round infection with an expanded host range that now includes numerous mammalian species. Its high pathogenicity is primarily driven by the acquisition of a polybasic haemagglutinin cleavage site, enabling systemic viral spread, alongside emerging endothelial and neurotropic properties that contribute to severe disease and high mortality in mammals. Although zoonotic transmission remains limited, H5N1 continues to accumulate mutations associated with mammalian adaptation, particularly within the haemagglutinin and polymerase complex. Notably, recent outbreaks in U.S. dairy cattle highlight the emergence of novel mammalian reservoirs with increased human exposure risk. Concurrently, vaccination strategies are advancing beyond traditional adjuvanted inactivated vaccines toward next-generation platforms, including mRNA and virus-like particle vaccines, designed for rapid deployment and broader immune protection. However, ongoing viral evolution, constrained vaccine availability, and gaps in coordinated surveillance underscore the urgent need for an integrated One Health approach to reduce panzootic risk.

Source: 


Link: https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/18/4/410

____

#Survival #trends in patients with difficult-to-treat, #antibiotic-resistant, Gram-negative #infections in the era of next-generation antibiotics in the #USA: a retrospective cohort study

 


Summary

Background

Difficult-to-treat resistant (DTR) Gram-negative infections show resistance to all first-line antibiotics (ie, β-lactams and fluoroquinolones) and have a 40% greater mortality rate than susceptible infections. New antibiotics are now available with improved safety and efficacy and with in-vitro activity against DTR infections; however, their influence on the outcomes of patients with DTR infections remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate whether and why mortality in patients with DTR infections has changed since the introduction of these newer antibiotics in the USA.

Methods

In this retrospective cohort study in the USA, adult patients (aged ≥18 years) with a DTR Gram-negative infection, defined as microbiological evidence of DTR Enterobacterales, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, or Acinetobacter baumannii and receipt of at least 3 consecutive days of any antibiotic therapy, were identified from hospitals reporting microbiology data in the PINC-AI Healthcare Database. We characterised the proportion of inpatient encounters receiving newer DTR-active antibiotics, traditional DTR-active antibiotics, and non-DTR-active antibiotics. We used a generalised linear mixed model with marginal predictions to examine changes in in-hospital mortality, defined as death or discharge to hospice, over the study period when adjusting for patient-related and treatment-related factors (including receipt of a new antibiotic and receipt of in-vitro discordant initial therapy), hospital-related factors (including the availability of newer antibiotics and corresponding susceptibility testing), and COVID-19 pandemic-related factors. A three-way interaction term for time (year), pathogen, and infection site (ie, bloodstream and non-bloodstream) was included given the expected differences in mortality.

Findings

Between Jan 1, 2016, and Aug 31, 2023, 8 319 398 adult inpatient encounters with available microbiology data were recorded from 471 hospitals, of which 9384 (0.11%) encounters had microbiological evidence of an eligible DTR organism. 5065 (54·0%) of these 9384 encounters, from 262 hospitals, met the inclusion criteria for DTR Gram-negative infections and were included in the study. Among this cohort, the prescription of newer antibiotics, as well as the availability of newer antibiotics and their corresponding susceptibility tests, increased substantially from 2016 to 2023. Although the proportion of encounters in which the patient received a newer antibiotic as initial therapy increased from 4% (21 of 589) in 2016 to 15% (34 of 234) in 2023, in most cases (196 [84%] of 234) patients continued to receive in-vitro discordant initial antibiotic therapy, even in 2023. We observed no change in the average marginal effect (the average percentage change per year) for adjusted mortality between 2016 and 2023 for Enterobacterales (0.1% [95% CI −1.1 to 1.4]), P aeruginosa (−0.7% [−1.7 to 0.3]), or A baumannii (−0.4% [−1.8 to 0.9]) infections. When dichotomised into bloodstream and non-bloodstream infections, the marginal effect for adjusted mortality remained unchanged over time for most pathogen and site combinations, with the exception of P aeruginosa bloodstream infections, for which a decrease was observed (−4.5% [−8.2 to −0.60]).

Interpretation

Despite the availability of newer antibiotic agents, the estimated mortality and ongoing use of in-vitro discordant initial antibiotics remains unacceptably high among patients with DTR infections in US hospitals. Prompt recognition of both the pathogen and resistance phenotype could be a crucial component in reducing mortality. Although notable, the decrease over time in adjusted mortality for P aeruginosa bloodstream infections should be considered hypothesis-generating because the cohort of patients with such infections was small.

Funding

US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center; US National Cancer Institute; the Intramural Research Program of the US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; and the US Food and Drug Administration.


Research in context

Evidence before this study

Difficult-to-treat resistance is a resistance phenotype describing Gram-negative pathogens that show resistance to all first-line, safe and effective traditional antibiotic options (ie, β-lactams [including carbapenems] and fluoroquinolones). As a result, difficult-to-treat resistant (DTR) infections are associated with high mortality, of which they are a better predictor than susceptible infections. Several new antibiotics have been introduced into the US market since 2014 and could provide more treatment options to patients with antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) infections such as DTR infections, for whom no safe and effective treatment exists. Evidence supporting a reduction in mortality after treatment with these new antibiotics, specifically in patients with AMR infections, is scarce. Understanding the population-level change in mortality following the implementation of these new antibiotic therapies could inform current priorities in therapeutic and diagnostic development to improve outcomes in this high-risk patient population. We searched PubMed from database inception to Dec 16, 2025, for studies with the Medical Subject Headings Major Topics “Bacterial Infections/mortality” AND “Drug Resistance, bacterial”, with no language restrictions. This search returned 426 publications. 34 articles evaluated trends in bacterial resistance over time and associated mortality among drug-resistant bacterial infections, of which 13 examined only Gram-positive bacterial infections and eight examined a period before the introduction of any of the newer antibiotics (ie, before 2014). Mortality estimates over time in the remaining 13 publications considered only discrete phenotypes for which alternative effective treatment options might exist, did not characterise the use of newer antibiotics within the study population, and did not adjust for relevant COVID-19 pandemic-related factors that are likely to affect the interpretation of mortality trends since 2020.

Added value of this study

This study leverages an administrative and clinical database to identify, to our knowledge, the largest cohort to date of hospitalised patients with DTR Gram-negative infections in the USA. We evaluate adjusted mortality trends in patients with DTR infections after the real-world introduction of six new antibiotics (ceftolozane–tazobactam, ceftazidime–avibactam, meropenem–vaborbactam, imipenem–relebactam, eravacycline, and cefiderocol) with broad spectra of activity and variable side-effect profiles. Trends in mortality were examined using a generalised linear mixed model adjusted for relevant patient-related, hospital-related, and COVID-19 pandemic-related covariates. The estimated probability of mortality across DTR Enterobacterales, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter baumannii infections did not change from 2016 to 2023. When dichotomised into bloodstream and non-bloodstream infections, we identified a 4.5% annual reduction in the adjusted mortality for P aeruginosa bloodstream infections, albeit the sample size for this population was small (n=87). The trends in adjusted mortality for all other pathogen and infection-site combinations remained unchanged. These findings occurred in the setting of persistent and frequent use of in-vitro discordant initial empirical therapy despite a substantial increase in access to and use of newer antibiotic options.

Implications of all the available evidence

Our results underscore the importance of better understanding why survival has not improved across all DTR Gram-negative infections despite the availability of newer, safe, and effective broad-spectrum antibiotic options. The development and real-world implementation of improved rapid diagnostic platforms for early detection of resistant phenotypes could improve patient outcomes. Comparative trials of new antibiotics with increased representation of patients with highly resistant bacterial infections, namely DTR infections, could elucidate the true clinical benefit of newer antibiotics in their respective target populations. Exploration of additional non-antibiotic, host-directed therapies could address the immune dysregulation that might contribute to poor patient outcomes, even among those who die with susceptible infections.

Source: 


Link: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(26)00020-4/fulltext?rss=yes

____

#Italy, First European imported #Human Case of an #H9N2 avian #influenza virus infection discovered in #Lombardy (Press Release, March 25 '26)

 


"Thanks to the epidemiological surveillance network active in the region, the first European {imported} case of avian influenza of the H9 subtype has been identified in a patient arriving from abroad," said the Regional Councilor for Welfare.

The Lombardy Region immediately activated coordination procedures with the Ministry of Health and the Istituto Superiore di SanitĂ  (ISS) to ensure the utmost rigor in managing the case and monitoring contacts.

The councilor added

"The patient is currently hospitalized in isolation at San Gerardo Hospital in Monza. In addition to treatment for the viral infection, the medical team is managing other comorbidities the patient is suffering from. The epidemiological investigation was promptly conducted by ATS Brianza, while the molecular analyses that allowed for the precise identification of the virus were performed by the University of Milan and confirmed by the Regional Center for Infectious Diseases (composed of the Directorate General for Welfare – Prevention Unit of the Lombardy Region, ASST Fatebenefratelli-Sacco and San Matteo di Pavia) and the ISS."

"The identification of the first European case of H9 influenza in Lombardy," ​​emphasized, "shouldn't be a cause for alarm for the public, but it is tangible proof that our prevention system is working with extreme precision. We acted very quickly." (LNews)

Source: 


Link: https://www.lombardianotizie.online/comunicato-stampa/lombardia-influenza-h9/

____

Rapid GeneXpert #surveillance of #influenza A virus in #seabirds and the #environment provides early warning for #wildlife health in #Aotearoa New Zealand

 


Abstract

The global expansion of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus A(H5N1) underscores the need for rapid surveillance at high-risk wildlife interfaces. Taiaroa Head (45.7828 S, 170.7333 E) in the South Island of Aotearoa New Zealand hosts a plethora of aquatic wildlife including a large red-billed gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae scopulinus) colony as well as the only mainland breeding colony of northern royal albatross (Diomedea sanfordi). The Royal Albatross Centre is also a major nature tourism destination, attracting tens of thousands of visitors annually, thereby creating a dense ecological and human-wildlife interface vulnerable to viral incursion. We evaluated the GeneXpert II platform using the Xpert Xpress Flu/RSV cartridge as a field-deployable tool for avian influenza virus detection in environmental and wildlife-associated samples. The assay detected synthetic influenza A viral RNA and multiple endemic low pathogenic avian influenza virus subtypes (A(H3N8), A(H1N9), A(H5N2) and A(H7N7)) circulating in New Zealand birds. Influenza A virus was reliably identified in spiked environmental water samples with no consistent PCR inhibition as well as naturally occurring avian influenza virus in duck pond water. Field deployment demonstrated that the system could be operated by non-laboratory personnel with minimal training in a non-clinical setting. This study establishes the feasibility of near-real-time environmental monitoring. Repurposing clinical cartridge-based point-of-care diagnostics offers a practical early warning approach for avian influenza virus surveillance at ecologically and economically significant locations.


Competing Interest Statement

Steven G Badman is employed by Cepheid who supplied the Xpert Flu/RSV kits for free. Jo-Ann Stanton is the owner of JStanton Consulting Ltd who contributed in kind resources to the project. JLS has received support from Cepheid and Roche to attend scientific meetings.


Funder Information Declared

Te Niwha, TN/SWC/24/UoOJG

Rutherford Discovery Fellowship, RDF-20-UOO-007

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.03.23.713605v1

____

#UK, #England: Notified cases of invasive #meningococcal disease - Updated 25 March 2026 (UKHSA, edited)

 


{Excerpt}

(...)

Daily case figures

-- The number of confirmed and probable cases can change when:

- a case is laboratory confirmed

- when the clinical assessment changes, including when new laboratory results are available

- when further epidemiological information is available

__

The figures in Table 1 cannot be used to identify the number of new confirmed or probable cases from one day to the next. This also applies to total cases.


Table 1. Cases of invasive meningococcal disease linked to Canterbury, Kent by day from 16 March 2026

[Date - Total outbreak confirmed cases - Outbreak confirmed MenB cases (subset of total outbreak confirmed cases) - Outbreak confirmed MenB cases with outbreak strain (subset of outbreak confirmed MenB cases) - Outbreak probable cases - Total outbreak cases]

* 24 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 2 - 22

* 23 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 17 - 3 - 23

* 22 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - [note 1] - 9 - 29

* 21 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - [note 1] - 9 - 29

* 20 March 2026 - 23 - 18 - [note 1] - 11 - 34

* 19 March 2026 - 18 - 13 - [note 1] - 11 - 29

* 18 March 2026 - 15 - 9 - [note 1] - 12 - 27

* 17 March 2026 - 9 - 6 - [note 1] - 11 - 20

* 16 March 2026 - [note 1] - 4 - [note 1] - [note 1] - 1

__

Note 1: Information not reported

Note 2: A case initially classified as a confirmed case may be reclassified or discarded when further laboratory results and clinical information is available. This applies to situations where:

- further testing (including results from specialist reference laboratories) rules out meningococcal disease

and 

- there is an alternative diagnosis or where the clinical picture is no longer consistent with meningococcal infection

__

Note: The case numbers presented in Table 1 were confirmed at specific times of day for each of the releases: 16 March 2026 verified at 5:00pm, 17 March 2026 verified at 3:00pm, 18 March 2026 onwards verified at 12:30pm.

- There have been 2 deaths since the start of the incident.

(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/invasive-meningococcal-disease-statistical-releases/notified-cases-of-invasive-meningococcal-disease

____

Mild #SARS-CoV-2 #maternal #infection in mice induces transient offspring #neurodevelopmental aberrance

 


Significance

The rising global numbers of SARS-CoV-2 infections highlight the need to assess potential neurodevelopmental and psychiatric impact in children born to infected mothers. Human cohorts have provided conflicting conclusions, while mouse studies have focused on moderate-to-severe infection despite most infections in pregnant women being mild or asymptomatic. Our study shows that mild, respiratory tract–restricted SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnant mice was sufficient to cause placental inflammation and transient changes in offspring brain gene expression, without altering gross brain structure or behavior under our experimental conditions. These findings suggest that soluble factors induced by maternal respiratory infection mediate placental inflammation and changes in offspring brain gene expression during the fetal and neonatal periods, which resolve in later childhood.


Abstract

Maternal viral infection during pregnancy has been identified as a risk factor for psychiatric disorders and neurodevelopmental abnormalities in offspring. With cumulative SARS-CoV-2 infections now numbering in the hundreds of millions globally, there is a need to evaluate the effects of maternal SARS-CoV-2 infection on offspring brain development and behavior. We developed a mouse model of mild COVID-19 during pregnancy in which SARS-CoV-2 infection is restricted to the respiratory tract. Infected mothers did not show weight loss or changes in litter size, but did exhibit detectable local and systemic immune responses, including placental inflammation. Characterization of the offspring’s cerebral cortex revealed transcriptomic changes in the fetus at E15 and on postnatal day 5 (P5), but no gross alterations in cytoarchitecture, synaptic density, or microglial abundance. We did not detect any significant changes in open-field or novel object recognition tests in P50 offspring born to SARS-CoV-2-infected dams. These findings suggest that mild maternal respiratory SARS-CoV-2 infection induces soluble factors that mediate placental inflammation and transient cerebral cortex alterations in offspring that resolve by later childhood.

Source: 


Link: https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2518294123?af=R

____

Porcine #influenza #mAbs to #H3, #H5, and #H7 hemagglutinins recognize H3 egg adapted site and target the HA stem

 


Abstract

Introduction

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are critical tools for elucidating viral evolution, informing vaccine design, and developing antiviral therapeutics. Large-animal models, such as the pig, that closely mirror human immune responses are essential for understanding influenza immunity.

Methods

Pigs were either infected or sequentially immunized with influenza viruses and monoclonal antibodies directed against H3, H5, and H7 influenza virus haemagglutinins were isolated. Antibody specificity, breadth, epitope targeting (head versus stem), neutralizing capacity, and Fc-mediated activity were assessed across influenza subtypes.

Results

Pigs generated both strain-specific and broadly reactive mAbs targeting haemagglutinin head and stem epitopes. An H3-specific mAb (H3–57) selectively recognized the egg-adapted L194P mutation associated with reduced human vaccine effectiveness. H5 and H7 immunization induced neutralizing antibodies, including cross-group stem mAbs reactive with H1, H3, and H5 haemagglutinins. Fc-mediated activity correlated with antibody binding strength rather than epitope location.

Conclusions

These findings demonstrate that pigs mount antibody responses closely resembling those observed in humans, including recognition of conserved stem epitopes and adaptive head mutations. Porcine mAbs represent powerful new tools for dissecting influenza immunity, guiding vaccine design, and enhancing pandemic preparedness using a physiologically relevant large-animal model.

Source: 


Link: https://academic.oup.com/discovimmunology/article/5/1/kyag006/8503709

____

Host-specific functional #evolution of #seal #influenza A virus #NS1 protein following #avian-to-seal #transmission

 


ABSTRACT

Marine mammals, particularly seals, are susceptible to both avian and human influenza A viruses (IAVs), making them potential intermediates for zoonotic virus emergence. In recent decades, repeated transmissions of avian influenza viruses (AIVs) from wild aquatic birds, their natural reservoir, have caused significant mortality in seals. Defining the molecular determinants of viral adaptation in marine mammals, and their implications for replication in human cells, is therefore essential. The non-structural protein 1 (NS1) of AIV, a key antagonist of the interferon (IFN) response, plays a central role in host adaptation. Here, we analyzed NS1 proteins from seal influenza viruses (H3, H4, H5, H7, and H10 subtypes) and their closest avian relatives isolated between 1980 and 2023, and evaluated their function in seal, avian, and human cells. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed multiple bird-to-seal transmission events. Seal-derived NS1 proteins generally contained few strain-specific amino acid substitutions and showed comparable expression and IFN antagonism to their avian precursors. A notable exception was the seal H10N7 virus isolated in 2014 in Northeastern Europe, which harbored three previously uncharacterized substitutions at NS1 amino acid residues 94, 104, and 171. These amino acid substitutions markedly altered NS1 properties to enhance protein stability, suppress IFN induction, mediate host transcription shut-off, and increase polymerase activity in human cells, without affecting NS1 expression or reducing virus replication in avian cells. Overall, these results reveal how NS1 undergoes host-specific functional evolution following avian-to-seal transmission and provide mechanistic insight into the adaptation of influenza A viruses to mammalian hosts.


IMPORTANCE

Avian influenza viruses (AIVs) circulate naturally in wild aquatic birds but occasionally infect mammals, including seals, where they can cause severe outbreaks. Seals are of particular concern because they can harbor both avian and human influenza viruses, creating opportunities for reassortment and the emergence of novel zoonotic strains. Understanding how AIVs adapt to mammalian hosts is therefore critical for anticipating and mitigating future influenza threats. Here, we investigated the role of the NS1 protein, a key viral factor that suppresses host immune responses, in seal-derived AIVs. Overall, NS1 expression and function were conserved across different subtypes and host cells. However, we identified unique amino acid substitutions in the NS1 of a seal H10N7 virus that enhanced protein stability, interferon antagonism, and viral adaptation in human cells. These findings illustrate how minor changes in NS1 protein can drive host adaptation and underscore the need for continued surveillance of AIVs in seals.

Source: 


Link: https://journals.asm.org/doi/full/10.1128/jvi.01650-25?af=R

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#UK, #England: Notified cases of invasive #meningococcal disease - Updated 24 March 2026 (UKHSA, edited)

 


{Excerpt}

(...)

Daily case figures

-- The number of confirmed and probable cases can change when:

- a case is laboratory confirmed

- when the clinical assessment changes, including when new laboratory results are available

- when further epidemiological information is available

-- The figures in Table 1 cannot be used to identify the number of new confirmed or probable cases from one day to the next. This also applies to total cases.


Table 1. Cases of invasive meningococcal disease linked to Canterbury, Kent by day from 16 March 2026

[Date - Total confirmed cases - Confirmed MenB cases (subset of total confirmed cases) - Probable cases - Total cases]

* 23 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 20 - 3 - 23

* 22 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - 9 - 29

* 21 March 2026 - 20 [note 2] - 19 - 9 - 29

* 20 March 2026 - 23 - 18 - 11 - 34

* 19 March 2026 - 18 - 13 - 11 - 29

* 18 March 2026 - 15 - 9 - 12 - 27

* 17 March 2026 - 9 - 6 - 11 - 20

* 16 March 2026 - [note 1] - 4 - [note 1] - 15

__

Note 1: The distinction between a confirmed case and a probable case was not reported

Note 2: A case initially classified as a confirmed case may be reclassified or discarded when further laboratory results and clinical information is available. This applies to situations where:

- there are other negative results, for example, reference unit results 

and 

- there is an alternative diagnosis or where the clinical picture is no longer consistent with meningococcal infection

__

Note: The case numbers presented in Table 1 were confirmed at specific times of day for each of the releases: 16 March 2026 verified at 5:00pm, 17 March 2026 verified at 3:00pm, 18 March 2026 onwards verified at 12:30pm.

There have been 2 deaths since the start of the incident.

(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/invasive-meningococcal-disease-statistical-releases/notified-cases-of-invasive-meningococcal-disease

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On the brink of emergence: an evolutionary approach to #Influenza A virus #H5N1 isolated from #humans

 


Highlights

• A detailed phylogenetic analysis of H5N1 HPAIV isolated from humans was performed.

• All strains infecting humans have acquired substitutions in several key proteins.

• All strains have gained specific substitutions to better adapt to the human host.

• Substitutions in key proteins involved in replication and immune evasion were found.

• A significant degree of polymorphic sites was found in the polymerase complex.

• Substitutions in hemagglutinins and neuraminidases from different clades were found.


Abstract

Avian Influenza Viruses (AIVs) pose today a very significant risk to global health given the widespread circulation of H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIV). After decimating the avian population all over the world, these viruses spill over to many different mammal species, causing also fatal outbreaks. As the virus continues to evolve increasing human cases of H5N1 HPAIV have been reported, causing concern that these viruses may adapt to the human host and became a pandemic new virus. In order to gain insight into this matter, a detailed phylogenetic analysis of H5N1 HPAIV isolated from humans was performed. A significant number of substitutions have been found in the hemagglutinins (HA) and neuraminidases (NA) among the three H5N1 clades already detected in human cases. Some of these substitutions were found to produce changes in the 3D structure of these proteins. Substitutions providing an evolutionary advantage to replicate or evade the immune response in mammals have been found in several non-structural proteins of strains infecting humans, including regulatory proteins, like PA-X or PB1-F2. A significant degree of polymorphic sites was observed in the proteins of the polymerase complex. The results of these studies are discussed in terms of the evolution of H5N1 HPAIV infecting humans and future work to be done to address the pandemic potential of these viruses.

Source: 


Link: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168170226000353?via%3Dihub

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#Oseltamivir aziridines are potent #influenza #neuraminidase #inhibitors and imaging agents

 


Significance

Influenza remains a major global health threat. We introduce oseltamivir-based aziridines that unite transition-state mimicry for tight binding with aziridine-enabled covalent capture of the catalytic tyrosine. This dual function yields potent, mechanism-based neuraminidase inhibition and enables activity-based quantification of active enzyme directly in complex samples. Across N1, N2, and influenza B enzymes, selected compounds show high potency against diverse viral neuraminidases and in live virus replication assays. By combining a clinically grounded scaffold with a reactivity handle, these molecules bridge therapeutic and diagnostic needs and offer a practical platform for neuraminidase imaging and antiviral development.


Abstract

Influenza neuraminidase (NA) is a critical target for seasonal and pandemic antivirals, including the strains of current concern. Current treatments, such as Zanamivir and Oseltamivir, are limited by noncovalent binding and emerging resistance. We hypothesized that Oseltamivir aziridines would unite transition-state mimicry for tight binding, with aziridine-enabled covalent capture of the catalytic tyrosine, thereby supporting both therapy and activity-based quantification. Here, we present oseltamivir-based aziridines, inspired by cyclophellitol chemistry, that act as covalent inhibitors and activity-based probes via an N-acylaziridine warhead. Free-energy calculations, and NMR observations, indicate a 4H5 half-chair preference consistent with the NA transition state, and selected analogues inhibit multiple NA subtypes with low nanomolar binding constants. Diverse evidence establishes covalency: time-dependent inactivation, inhibitor washout, intact-mass shifts, MS/MS identification of a tyrosine adduct, and QM/MM reaction profiles, while cryoEM of N1 aligns with the proposed binding mode, revealing an elimination product. The inhibitors demonstrate formidable activity against diverse viral neuraminidases, including H5N1, and further enable imaging and quantification of active NA. With their dual therapeutic and diagnostic potential, these first-in-class inhibitors indeed benefit from transition state mimicry and covalency, and thus offer a powerful platform for antiviral development and neuraminidase imaging, addressing urgent global health needs in influenza treatment and prevention.

Source: 


Link: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2504045123

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Mapping #global emergence of #pathogens with #epidemic and #pandemic #potential to inform and accelerate pandemic #prevention, #preparedness, readiness and response

 


Abstract

Introduction 

Increasing occurrence of epidemics and pandemics and concurrent emergence of different pathogens calls for multi-sectoral, multi-pathogen preparedness actions. Data on various factors that drive emergence of diverse pathogens can inform evidence-based preparedness by identifying geographies at-risk. When leveraging evidence within a One Health approach, multiple pathogens can be addressed simultaneously, thereby strengthening countries pandemic preparedness efforts. 

Methods 

For seventeen priority pathogens (avian influenza viruses, zoonotic coronaviruses including COVID-19, hemorrhagic fever viruses including Ebola, Henipaviruses, and arboviruses including yellow fever and Zika), we identified global evidence on animal reservoirs, vectors, environmental suitability, and reported human cases. We discriminated geospatially recorded pathogen detections from a background sample and constructed maps using these datasets to generate an evidence-based assessment of emergence risk globally. 

Results 

Seventeen pathogen-specific assessments were combined into a global composite map. Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia have evidence supporting emergence risk for the greatest number of pathogens (included areas at-risk of all pathogens) and scored highest when strength-of-evidence weightings were factored. The Americas had the lowest tally of considered pathogens. Environmental suitability analyses received the highest weights, reservoir ranges the lowest. 

Discussion 

Preparedness and readiness must consider the range of global biological threats. Our methodology is capable of incorporating changing evidence on emergence potential for multiple pathogens to identify geographies at higher risk with different pathogen combinations. Our maps can contribute to existing decision-support structures, guiding shared interventions and strategic allocation of resources for spillover prevention and pandemic preparedness, thereby enhancing local response capacities applying a multidisciplinary approach.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.


Funding Statement

This work was concluded in 2024 and supported by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) before January 22, 2025, the Germany Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) and the Government of France.

Source: 


Link: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.03.20.26347940v1

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