Abstract

BackgroundRecent (2013 and 2009) zoonotic transmission of avian or porcine influenza to humans highlights an increase in host range by evading species barriers. Gene reassortment or antigenic shift between viruses from two or more hosts can generate a new life-threatening virus when the new shuffled virus is no longer recognized by antibodies existing within human populations. There is no large scale study to help understand the underlying mechanisms of host transmission. Furthermore, there is no clear understanding of how different segments of the influenza genome contribute in the final determination of host range.MethodsTo obtain insight into the rules underpinning host range determination, various supervised machine learning algorithms were employed to mine reassortment changes in different viral segments in a range of hosts. Our multi-host dataset contained whole segments of 674 influenza strains organized into three host categories: avian, human, and swine. Some of the sequences were assigned to multiple hosts. In point of fact, the datasets are a form of multi-labeled dataset and we utilized a multi-label learning method to identify discriminative sequence sites. Then algorithms such as CBA, Ripper, and decision tree were applied to extract informative and descriptive association rules for each viral protein segment.ResultWe found informative rules in all segments that are common within the same host class but varied between different hosts. For example, for infection of an avian host, HA14V and NS1230S were the most important discriminative and combinatorial positions.ConclusionHost range identification is facilitated by high support combined rules in this study. Our major goal was to detect discriminative genomic positions that were able to identify multi host viruses, because such viruses are likely to cause pandemic or disastrous epidemics.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-3250-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Recent (2013 and 2009) zoonotic transmission of avian or porcine influenza to humans highlights an increase in host range by evading species barriers

  • The natural host of influenza virus is aquatic birds though they are capable of infecting a number of other host species, including swine and humans [2]

  • We have four additional classes: human-swine, human-avian, avian-swine, and human-avian-swine. These classes evolved by breaking host barriers via reassortment between viral strains

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Summary

Introduction

Recent (2013 and 2009) zoonotic transmission of avian or porcine influenza to humans highlights an increase in host range by evading species barriers. Influenza A is a virus related to the Orthomyxoviridae family of negative sense, single-stranded, segmented RNA viruses. The segmented structure of the virus facilitates gene reassortment when viruses from different hosts simultaneously infect a single cell [4]. The reassortment of genetic material between viruses with different host origins can significantly alter antigenic sites [5]. By this mechanism, novel viruses may enter the human population that lacks previous immunity, potentially causing the emergence of pandemics or disastrous epidemics [6]

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