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PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 7:18 am 
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March 30, 2012
The Obama administration has announced a new policy to handle the risks posed by legitimate biological research that could, in the wrong hands, threaten the public.

The move comes in response to a huge debate over recent experiments on bird flu virus that got funding from the National Institutes of Health. Critics say the work created mutant viruses that could potentially be dangerous for people, or give terrorists a road map for making a bioweapon.

A committee that advises the government called the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) is again meeting Friday to discuss those flu studies. Late last year, it recommended keeping some details secret. But a panel of experts, including flu virologists assembled by the World Health Organization, called for full publication.

The new policy is aimed at preventing this kind of controversy from happening in the future. It covers federally-funded research — both ongoing work and future proposals. And it calls for special reviews of work that involves a list of 15 particularly nasty pathogens and toxins, including highly pathogenic bird flu virus, anthrax, and Ebola.

Funding agencies will have to evaluate certain kinds of experiments to see if they pose special risks. The idea is "to really upfront ask the questions: Should they be done? And if so, under what conditions should they be done," explains Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the NIH.

If an agency wants to fund an experiment that might yield potentially dangerous information, Fauci says, scientists could be asked to hold back on publishing details in order to receive funding.

Or, in some cases, the work might need to be classified. Fauci notes that the NIH does not do classified studies. "We would have to refer it to an agency that does classified research because we don't," he says.

He says the NIH has already taken a look at the ongoing projects it's funded and believes very few will need more scrutiny under the new policy.

"We're not talking about a very large number of studies that are going to get looked at again and might be altered," Fauci says. "We are talking about really, really a little bit more than a handful of studies among hundreds of grants."

And so far he says it doesn't look like even these raise significant concerns.

The new policy was welcomed by Richard Ebright, a professor of chemistry at Rutgers University who has long called for better control of biological research that could be misused.

"My first reaction was that this is an important step forward. An overdue step, but an important one," Ebright says.

He notes that a high-profile panel of experts recommended that the government set up a comprehensive oversight system back in 2004. "It was widely expected that a policy would be developed and announced perhaps in 2004, perhaps in 2005," Ebright says. "We're seeing it now perhaps six years late."

The policy will apply to government agencies ranging from the NIH to the Department of Agriculture to the Department of Homeland Security, he notes. He thinks this policy could prevent another controversy like the one currently swirling around bird flu experiments — but only if agencies take real action.

"If the funding agencies propose only public relations or window dressing as risk mitigation," Ebright says, "then we'll have only public relations and window dressing and more of these problems arising."

Meanwhile, it's still unclear what will happen with the bird flu studies and the fight over how much information to make public.

The NSABB will wrap up its second meeting on this issue Friday and is expected to again offer advice on whether to publish the full details. But its recommendations are not binding on the government, the scientists or science journals.

Ron Fouchier of Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands, one of the scientists who did the work, spoke earlier this week on a live webcast of a science show called This Week in Virology.

"Regardless of what the U.S. government and Dutch government say, the authors and the journals are going to have the last vote on the publication issue," Fouchier said.
http://www.npr.org/2012/03/30/149664035 ... -tightened

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 3:29 pm 
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Commentary

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/03301 ... ology.html

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 4:47 pm 
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US biosecurity panel clears publication path for controversial bird flu studies
By Helen Branswell, The Canadian Press | Associated Press – 12 mins ago..

A panel of U.S. biosecurity experts is withdrawing its objections to the publication of two controversial bird flu studies.

The National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity says after reviewing revised versions of the studies it is recommending they can be published in full.

The board's recommendation must go to the U.S. government, which will then decide whether to accept or reject it.

If the U.S. government withdraws its objections, the move will draw to a close a controversy that has dragged on since late last fall.

The board voted unanimously to clear for publication a study by Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

The committee voted 12 to 6 on the second study, done by Dutch virologist Ron Fouchier.

Fouchier told The Canadian Press he is relieved by the outcome.

http://news.yahoo.com/us-biosecurity-pa ... 36664.html

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 5:26 pm 
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http://www.recombinomics.com/News/03301 ... drawn.html

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2012 5:40 pm 
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New thread on NSABB decision

viewtopic.php?f=5&t=8030

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 8:07 am 
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Apr 3, 2012 (CIDRAP News) – New details about H5N1 transmission studies emerged today during a Royal Society conference on the topic in London, but with Dutch export restrictions blocking what one research group could share.

Scientists who led the two studies in question both took the stage during the first day of a 2-day meeting to discuss a host of issues on the topic, from basic research to ethics. The Royal Society is offering a live webcast of the meeting.

Fresh information about the two controversial studies comes just days after the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) reversed an earlier recommendation that the studies be published in redacted form, due to concerns about an accidental or intentional release of the modified H5N1 viruses.

Yoshihiro Kawaoka, DVM, PhD, who leads a group from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, gave a detailed look at his team's H5N1 studies on ferrets. He highlighted four mutations that his group produced, one of which is found in nature. Three of the mutations were on the head of the virus, and one was on the stalk. The findings are slated to appear in a future issue of Nature.

He said using a hybrid between H5N1 and the 2009 H1N1 virus allowed his group to focus on the hemagglutinin portion. Kawaoka added that the mutant strains weren't lethal to the animals and that the pathogenicity was less than that of the 2009 pandemic virus.

Viruses containing the mutations were highly sensitive to antiviral drugs, and they reacted to sera from humans vaccinated against H5N1, he said. Kawaoka added that his group's data could have implications for public health policymakers. "Our information allows us to find the right virus for the production of stockpiled vaccines," he added.

One of the mutations—the one found in nature—had loss of a glycosylation site, a characteristic that Kawaoka said is linked to transmissibility in humans, and a pattern increasingly seen in countries such as Egypt in which the H5N1 virus has infected humans. "We can use the information to understand what's happening in nature," he said, adding that better surveillance is needed to assess the risk of circulating strains.

Kawaoka also gave a detailed view of his lab's biosecurity measures, which are based on US government regulations and adhere to agricultural biosafety level 3 (BSL-3). He said the term "enhanced BSL-3" is nonspecific, and that more efforts are needed to better define the security terms.

Though the other research group, led by Ron Fouchier, PhD, at Erasmus University in the Netherlands, used a different virus strain in their ferret studies, "we found striking similarity—mechanistically, a very interesting finding," Kawaoka said.

However, Fouchier said today that he could only share the redacted version of his study at the conference, because the Dutch government hasn't yet lifted export controls on the information.

While he couldn't disclose the mutations, he said the two studies provide more unanimous expert advice to countries that battle H5N1 threats. The group's findings will be published in an upcoming issue of Science.

Though the NSABB's reversal helps clear the way for publication in the two journals, the status of a voluntary moratorium on H5N1 research is unclear. In February a World Health Organization (WHO) expert panel recommended a host of measures, which included a research moratorium, pending a biosafety review of the practices at the labs.

Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), told CIDRAP News today that regularly scheduled, detailed safety reviews of the labs were already in progress when the WHO recommendations came out, unbeknownst to that group. He said an extra round of reviews won't be conducted, given that they have been done multiple times and very recently.

He said the Dutch government is as strict as the United States is with research biosafety issues, and that the Erasmus group—like the Wisconsin group— has also met or exceeded safety guidelines.

A panel from the Dutch government that is similar to the NSABB meets on Apr 23 and 24 to address the export restriction, Fauci said.

During today's presentations, more details emerged about last week's NSABB meeting to consider revised versions of the two studies.

Paul Keim, PhD, acting director of the NSABB and a microbial geneticist at Northern Arizona University, said the board's decision to reverse its recommendation was influenced by clarifications from Fouchier's group. He said those details were included in "an additional 1,000 words from Science" and in confidential and yet-unpublished data on the evolution of the virus.

Due to US export controls in place at the time, as well as those from the Dutch government, the NSABB didn't have access to the revised papers ahead of time and had only 2 hours to review the revisions at the meeting, Keim said.

The Erasmus group's paper had not undergone a review yet by Science, so observers shouldn't read too much into the differences in wording that the NSABB used in its statement when referring to the two different papers, he added.

Keim said the new US policy on oversight of federally funded life sciences dual-use research is a step in the right direction, and that a system to flag and monitor issues earlier in the process was lacking. He predicted that more steps will be needed in the years ahead to address similar issues.

"We're at a brink in synthetic biology, and technology is changing so much faster than the moral compass," he said.

One theme that wove through several of the Royal Society presentations today is the need for more discussion to tackle issues related to H5N1 transmission research. Keim and many of the other presenters said scientists need to come up with a framework and guidelines themselves to avoid lawmakers stepping in to steer policies, which would likely be even more burdensome.

Thomas Inglesby, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Biosecurity at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, urged researchers to extend the voluntary moratorium until there is wide agreement on how to proceed. He added that experts have worked through the risks and benefits in a transparent way, including participants from outside the United States and Europe.

He also said the work should be limited to as few labs as possible and that a top priority should be improving the capacity to quickly produce larger quantities of better H5N1 vaccines.

The Royal Society program continues tomorrow, with discussions on news and publishing, funding, ethics, the vaccine industry, and public involvement, with time devoted to open discussions.

See also:

Royal Society webcast link

Apr 2 CIDRAP News story "Major players weigh implications of NSABB H5N1 reversal"

Mar 30 CIDRAP News story "NSABB reverses recommendation on H5N1 studies"

Mar 29 CIDRAP News story "US debuts life sciences dual-use research policy"

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/conten ... royal.html

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 8:08 am 
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Apr 2, 2012 (CIDRAP News) – A federal advisory board's reversal on publishing two controversial H5N1 studies is poised to shift discussions on the topic that continue in London this week, as more participants in the debate weigh in following the Mar 30 announcement.

The National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB), which advises the US government on life sciences dual-use research issues, met last week to consider revised versions of the two papers, and on Mar 30 they voted to reverse an earlier recommendation that the papers should be published with key details redacted.

The NSABB unanimously recommended full publication of the revised manuscript by the University of Wisconsin group, headed by Yoshihiro Kawaoka, DVM, PhD, and by a 12-to-6 vote that the data, methods, and conclusions in the revised paper by the Erasmus group, headed by Ron Fouchier, PhD, be published.

One of the factors that swayed the NSABB decision was new evidence that an understanding of the mutations could be useful for surveillance and public health standpoints, the group said in a statement announcing the vote, but it did not elaborate.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH), which funded both studies, said in a Mar 30 statement that it would forward the advisory group's recommendation to NIH Director Francis Collins, MD, PhD, and the US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius for their review and consideration.

"HHS will then bring a recommendation to the broader US government for consultation," the NIH said. "Following a decision by HHS on the NSABB recommendations, HHS will work with the international community in moving forward on dual use research more broadly."

Paul Keim, PhD, acting chairman of the NSABB, told CIDRAP News that the group hopes to work on some additional guidelines on H5N1 research issues in the months ahead. Keim is director of pathogen genomics in the Translational Genomics Research Institute at Northern Arizona University,

At a press conference today before tomorrow's start of a Royal Society conference on H5N1 research issues in London, Fouchier, speaking alongside Keim, said his group's revised paper included new epidemiologic evidence that spells out the benefits of the research, Discover Magazine reported today. Fouchier told reporters that the new information will be partially explained in the paper set to appear in Science, as well as in another forthcoming study.

He said the revised paper clarifies that the airborne viruses weren't lethal to the ferrets and includes an expanded discussion, based on more space allotted by Science, of the work's public health benefits, according to the Discover story.

The 2-day Royal Society discussion will be webcast live, and participants will include Fouchier, Kawaoka, a host of internationally recognized H5N1 researchers, a representative from the NSABB, biosecurity experts, dual-use research experts, editors from Nature and Science, along with participants from public policy, vaccine research, funding, and journalism fields.

Kawaoka told CIDRAP News that his research team is buoyed by the NSABB's recent decision, and he said he wasn't surprised by the outcome. He added that conveying more about the implications of his group's findings on public health played a key role in the deliberations.

"Specifically, we were able to explain that very few mutations are needed for the hemagglutinin of the currently circulating H5N1 viruses to become a hemagglutinin that supports respiratory droplet transmission in ferrets," he said.

He referred questions about a possible timeline for the publication of his paper to Nature, whose spokesperson Rebecca Walton told CIDRAP News that the journal doesn't yet have a tentative publication date for the paper.

Meanwhile, Science, in a Mar 30 statement from editor-in-chief Bruce Alberts, PhD, to journalists, said the Erasmus group's paper needs to go through further peer review and editing.

Alberts said the journal would consult closely with Fouchier's lab and the Dutch government to ensure that all concerns have been resolved. Last month the Dutch government said it was investigating if it could use export controls to block the publication of the paper.

He said Science applauds the NSABB's willingness to reconsider its original recommendation. "We will work with our authors to ensure that a revised manuscript clearly reports that the mutant H5N1 virus developed by Dr. Fouchier and colleagues at Erasmus Medical Center did not, in fact, kill ferrets in the laboratory following aerosol based transmission—that is, by one ferret sneezing or coughing onto another ferret. The virus was fatal to ferrets only after animals were inoculated intratracheally at extremely high doses," he said in the statement.

Kawaoka pointed out that resuming work at the lab is separate from the NSABB decision. Though a voluntary 60-day moratorium on similar H5N1 research has expired, researchers have agreed to extend it to allow Dutch and US government officials to conduct reviews on what level of biosecurity is best for H5N1 transmission studies.

That action was a component of an agreement that came out of a World Health Organization consultation in mid February.

During a Mar 26 live episode of the "This Week in Viology" podcast on the sidelines of the Society for General Microbiology conference in Dublin, Fouchier said his country's government has reexamined lab biosecurity requirements for H5N1 transmission work and has maintained an earlier decision that the research be cone in enhanced biosafety level 3 (BSL-3) conditions. So far, the US government has not released its recommendation after a similar review.

News editor Robert Roos contributed to this article.

See also:

Mar 30 NSABB statement

Mar 30 NIH press release

Apr 2 Discover Magazine blog post

Mar 30 CIDRAP News story "NSABB reverses recommendation on H5N1 studies"

Royal Society meeting webcast link
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/conten ... react.html

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 9:31 am 
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niman wrote:
Apr 3, 2012 (CIDRAP News) –
One of the mutations—the one found in nature—had loss of a glycosylation site, a characteristic that Kawaoka said is linked to transmissibility in humans, and a pattern increasingly seen in countries such as Egypt in which the H5N1 virus has infected humans. "We can use the information to understand what's happening in nature," he said, adding that better surveillance is needed to assess the risk of circulating strains.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/conten ... royal.html



The above comments almost certainly refer to S133L (S129L in H5 numbering) found in clade 2.3.4 sequences such as the one used by Kawaoka. This may be the 5th change found by Fouchier. S133del is in all recent human isolates in Egypt, which would also remove the glycosylation site.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 9:51 am 
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S133L pedigree

EPI361815 A/Thailand/1(KAN-1)/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI361524 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI359216 A/Perth/16-RGcH7-3/2009 (A/H3N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI359214 A/Puerto Rico/8-RGcH5-1/1934 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI353351 A/duck/Viet Nam/TG24-01/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI340404 A/chicken/Bangladesh/11rs1984-30/2011 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI340400 A/chicken/Bangladesh/11rs1984-37/2011 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI339154 A/chicken/Egypt/VSVRI/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI338788 A/chicken/Bangladesh/BL-543/2011 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI338293 A/chicken/Thailand/KU14/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI337271 A/environment/Guizhou/2/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327223 A/chicken/Viet Nam/TMU007/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327162 A/openbill stork/Thailand/VSMU-12-BKK/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327161 A/openbill stork/Thailand/VSMU-8-BKK/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327160 A/openbill stork/Thailand/VSMU-6-BKK/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327159 A/openbill stork/Thailand/VSMU-5-NSN/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327158 A/openbill stork/Thailand/VSMU-4-NSN/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327157 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-7372/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327156 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-7356/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327155 A/environment/Thailand/ICRC-6670/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI327093 A/Silver Pheasant/Thailand/VSMU-1-CBI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI321406 A/chicken/Tabanan/BBVD-142/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI321405 A/chicken/Tabanan/BBVD-107/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI321317 A/chicken/Denpasar/BBVD-456/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI321312 A/chicken/Denpasar/BBVD-182/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI321286 A/chicken/Badung/BBVD-302/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI314926 A/ostrich/Suzhou/097/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI314320 A/pigeon/Thailand/VSMU-7-NPT/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI300863 A/chicken/Cambodia/022LC2b/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI300792 A/chicken/Cambodia/022LC2b/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI297552 A/chicken/Huadong/4/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI296712 A/Viet Nam/1203-CIP045_RG002/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286615 A/muscovy duck/Bac Ninh/07-69/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286389 A/duck/Mong Cai/07-58/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286383 A/chicken/Cao Bang/07-42/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286382 A/duck/Hai Duong/07-40/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286381 A/chicken/Nam Dinh/07-32/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286380 A/duck/Can Tho/07-28/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI286379 A/duck/Vinh Long/07-26/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284583 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-401/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284545 A/ngan/Vietnam/NCVD-420/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284531 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD-391/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284510 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-038/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284509 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-034/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284508 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-082/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284507 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-079/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284506 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-388/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284505 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-384/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284504 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-393/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284501 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-403/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284500 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-402/2010 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284489 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-035/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284479 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-083/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284476 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-093/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284472 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-296/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284471 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-295/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284456 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-283/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284455 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-282/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284454 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-281/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284438 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-392/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284437 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-383/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI284432 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-382/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI283945 A/chicken/Cambodia/022LC1b/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI283867 A/Cambodia/P0322095/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI280224 A/environment/Guizhou/2/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI276030 A/duck/Yunnan/47/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275974 A/duck/Guangdong/23/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275846 A/chicken/Shandong/A-10/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275830 A/chicken/Ningxia/24/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275814 A/chicken/Liaoning/A-1/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275790 A/chicken/Jiangsu/18/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275758 A/chicken/Henan/A-7/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275750 A/chicken/Hebei/A-8/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275670 A/Thailand/WRAIR1724H/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275662 A/Thailand/WRAIR1723H/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275654 A/Thailand/WRAIR1722H/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI275646 A/Thailand/WRAIR1721H/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272181 A/chicken/Shanxi/QX2/2009 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272176 A/chicken/Ningxia/QH14/2009 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272154 A/chicken/Anhui/QG5/2008 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272153 A/chicken/Jiangsu/Q305/2008 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272132 A/chicken/Anhui/QK18/2007 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272127 A/chicken/Hunan/Q25/2007 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272126 A/chicken/Yunnan/Q17/2007 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI272125 A/chicken/Yunnan/Q16/2007 (A/H5) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270268 A/Vietnam/HN31432M/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270180 A/Vietnam/UT30408III/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270172 A/Vietnam/HN30262IIIM3/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270164 A/Vietnam/UT30259/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270148 A/Vietnam/UT3047III/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270141 A/Vietnam/UT3040II/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270132 A/Vietnam/UT3040/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270124 A/Vietnam/UT3035/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI270116 A/Vietnam/UT3030/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI259563 A/Hong Kong/213-DkPass/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI244098 A/duck/Vietnam/TG24/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI235944 A/goose/Hong Kong/739.2/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI235909 A/egret/Hong Kong/757.2/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI235756 A/chicken/Hong Kong/409.1/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI235171 A/goose/Fujian/bb/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI234506 A/Viet Nam/3212/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI234496 A/open-billed Stork/Thailand/VSMU-15-ATG/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI234494 A/green peafowl/Thailand/VSMU-3-CBI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI234492 A/great barbet/Thailand/VSMU-2-CBI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI234491 A/gray-crowed crane/Thailand/VSMU-4-CBI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI234484 A/Duck/Bufeleng/BPPV1/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229713 A/crested eagle/Belgium/01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229712 A/crested eagle/Belgium/01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229698 A/crested eagle/Belgium/01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229663 A/duck/Ang Thong/71 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229655 A/unknown/Prachinburi Thailand/6231/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229541 A/pigeon/Thailand/1B/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI229533 A/environment/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228832 A/Vietnam/CL02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228831 A/chicken/Vietnam/159/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228830 A/duck/Vietnam/N-XX/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228631 A/Mynas/Ranong/Thailand/CU-209/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228630 A/Sparrow/Phang-Nga/Thailand/CU-203/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228629 A/Pigeon/Samut Prakan/Thailand/CU-202/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228628 A/chicken/Prachinburi/Thailand/CU-104/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228627 A/duck/Saraburi/Thailand/CU-74/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228626 A/chicken/Chonburi/Thailand/CU-73/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228625 A/duck/Nakhon Pathom/Thailand/CU-71/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228623 A/chicken/Nakhon Sawan/Thailand/CU-39/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228622 A/chicken/Lopburi/Thailand/CU-38/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228621 A/crow/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-35/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228620 A/Ostrich/Samut Prakan/Thailand/CU-31/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228619 A/White peafowl/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-29/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228618 A/chicken/Saraburi/Thailand/CU-27/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228617 A/rollers/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-26/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228616 A/crow/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-25/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228615 A/chicken/Ayutthaya/Thailand/CU-24/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228614 A/chicken/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-20/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228613 A/Ostrich/Samut Prakan/Thailand/CU-19/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228612 A/Kalji Pheasant/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-18/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228611 A/chicken/Saraburi/Thailand/CU-17/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228610 A/White peafowl/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-16/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228609 A/crow/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-15/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228608 A/chicken/Nakhon Pathom/Thailand/CU-14/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228607 A/chicken/Nakhon Sawan/Thailand/CU-13/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228606 A/chicken/Nakhon Sawan/Thailand/CU-12/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228605 A/chicken/Chachoengsao/Thailand/CU-11/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228604 A/chicken/Chachoengsao/Thailand/CU-10/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228603 A/chicken/Suphanburi/Thailand/CU-9/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228602 A/chicken/Prachinburi/Thailand/CU-8/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228601 A/chicken/Chonburi/Thailand/CU-7/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228600 A/chicken/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-6/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228599 A/duck/Chonburi/Thailand/CU-5/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228598 A/crow/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-4/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228597 A/chicken/Bangkok/Thailand/CU-3/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228596 A/chicken/Suphanburi/Thailand/CU-1/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228557 A/Chicken/Kamphaengphet-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228556 A/Chicken/Nakornsawan-2-07/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228555 A/chicken/Nakornsawan-2-03/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228553 A/Chicken/Kamphaengphet-2-04/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228552 A/duck/Uthaithani-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228551 A/Chicken/Nakornsawan-2-06/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228550 A/Chicken/Nakornsawan-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228549 A/duck/Nakornsawan-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228548 A/chicken/Phetchabun-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228547 A/chicken/Phitsanulok-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228546 A/Chicken/Kamphaengphet-2-05/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228545 A/Chicken/Uthaithani-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228544 A/chicken/Phitsanulok-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228543 A/Chicken/Nakornsawan-2-05/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228542 A/Chicken/Uthaithani-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228541 A/chicken/Phetchabun-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228540 A/chicken/Phitsanulok-2-04/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228539 A/Chicken/Nakornsawan-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228538 A/Chicken/Uthaithani-2-03/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228537 A/duck/Uthaithani-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228536 A/Chicken/Uthaithani-2-04/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228535 A/duck/Phitsanulok-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228534 A/duck/Phichit-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228533 A/duck/Phichit-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228532 A/chicken/Phitsanulok-2-03/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228531 A/Chicken/Uttaradit-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228530 A/Chicken/Uttaradit-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228529 A/little cuckoo-dove/Tak-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228528 A/Chicken/Uttaradit-2-03/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228527 A/Chicken/Uthaithani-2-05/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228526 A/Chicken/Sukhothai-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228525 A/Chicken/Sukhothai-2-02/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228524 A/Chicken/Kamphaengphet-2-06/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228523 A/Chicken/Kamphaengphet-2-03/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228522 A/duck/Nakornsawan-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228521 A/duck/Phitsanulok-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228520 A/Chicken/Nakornsawan-2-04/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228519 A/Chicken/Kamphaengphet-2-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228458 A/tiger/Thailand/SPB-1 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228441 A/Chicken/Ayutthaya/Thailand/CU-23/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228400 A/Leopard/Suphanburi/Thailand/Leo-1/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228392 A/Tiger/Suphanburi/Thailand/Ti-1/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228377 A/chicken/Nakorn-Patom/Thailand/CU-K3/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228375 A/quail/Thailand/CU-KTH/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228374 A/chicken/Nakorn-Patom/Thailand/CU-K2/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228368 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/MdGL/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228367 A/Chicken/Vietnam/CM/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228356 A/Hatay/2004/ (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228346 A/open-bill stork/Thailand/VSMU-20-AYA/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228345 A/open-bill stork/Thailand/VSMU-9-BKK/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI228344 A/open-bill stork/Thailand/VSMU-2-NSN/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227418 A/open-bill stork/Thailand/VSMU-29-NSN/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227413 A/open-bill stork/Thailand/VSMU-15-ATG/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227301 A/Mallard/Huadong/hn/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227189 A/duck/Vietnam/N-TB/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227174 A/duck/Viet Nam/NCVDCDC9/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227166 A/duck/Viet Nam/NCVDCDC14/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227138 A/duck/Lang Son/201/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227082 A/chicken/Thailand/Sukhothai/NIAH6-3-0013/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227081 A/chicken/Thailand/Phitsanulok/NIAH6-3-0012/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227064 A/chicken/Thailand/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3- 0010/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227063 A/chicken/Thailand/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3- 0009/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227062 A/chicken/Thailand/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3- 0008/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227061 A/chicken/Thailand/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3- 0006/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227060 A/chicken/Tebing Tinggi/BPPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227052 A/chicken/Tarutung/BPPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI227044 A/chicken/Simalanggang/BPPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226986 A/chicken/Lang Son/200/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226958 A/Chicken/Duma/BBPV-II/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226957 A/chicken/Deli Serdang/BPPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226949 A/chicken/Dairi/BPPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226849 A/Turkey/Langkat/BBPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226843 A/Thailand/RPFEHA/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226841 A/Thailand/NKNPHA/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226657 A/Chicken/Siak/BPPV-II/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226655 A/Chicken/Salam/BBPV-II/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226654 A/Chicken/Rokan Hilli/BPPV-II/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226650 A/Chicken/Deli Derdang/BBPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI226649 A/Chicken/Agam/BBPVI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI225308 A/moorhen/Thailand/CU-318/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI225306 A/moorhen/Thailand/CU-317/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI224903 A/Thailand/NBL1/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI224601 A/Chicken/Pulau Rampang/BBPVII/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI224600 A/Chicken/Padang/BBPVII/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI224599 A/Chicken/Karo/BBPVII/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI222484 A/pika/Qinghai/SHK/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI222476 A/pika/Qinghai/QW/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI222468 A/pika/Qinghai/HMH/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI222465 A/pika/Qinghai/GRL/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI222018 A/environment/Hunan/2-16/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI222010 A/environment/Hunan/2-1/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI221994 A/environment/Hunan/1-35/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI221986 A/environment/Hunan/1-12/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI221244 A/brown-head gull/Thailand/vsmu-4/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI220380 A/chicken/Uthaithani/NIAH115067/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI220369 A/chicken/Thailand/ST-351/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI220360 A/chicken/Thailand/CU-354/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI220349 A/chicken/Sukhothai/NIAH114843/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI180911 A/chicken/Laos/16/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI180247 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-093/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI180246 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-swab18/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI180245 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-swab17/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI180244 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-swab15/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI174583 A/chicken/Uthaithani/NIAH115067/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI171213 A/quail/Mingalardone/866/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI171212 A/guinea fowl/North Okkalarpa/834/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI171211 A/chicken/Hmawbi/517/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI170722 A/duck/Vietnam/201/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI170706 A/duck/Vietnam/203/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI170698 A/duck/Vietnam/204/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI170682 A/duck/Vietnam/206/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI168658 A/chicken/Nakhonsawan/NIAH6006587/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI168657 A/chicken/Phichit/NIAH600674/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI168656 A/chicken/Phichit/NIAH1/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI168435 A/chicken/Sukhothai/NIAH114843/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167842 A/peregrine falcon/Hong Kong/5211/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167751 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD-43/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167743 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-42/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167737 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-41/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167730 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-40/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167694 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD-34/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167633 A/Muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-22/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167318 A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD12/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167152 A/tree sparrow/Thailand/VSMU-16-RBR/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167149 A/tree sparrow/Thailand/VSMU-12-KRI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167148 A/pigeon/Thailand/VSMU-13-KRI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167147 A/pigeon/Thailand/VSMU-11-KRI/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167146 A/common myna/Thailand/VSMU-10-BRM/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167142 A/chicken/Phichit/NIAH606988/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167138 A/chicken/Angthong/NIAH8334/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167136 A/chicken/Suphanburi/NIAH7618/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167134 A/chicken/Nakhon Sawan/NIAH01503/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167133 A/chicken/Nakhon Sawan/NIAH01502/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167132 A/chicken/Samutprakan/NIAH6604/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167131 A/chicken/Loei/NIAH2373/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167130 A/chicken/NaraThiwat/NIAH1703/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167129 A/chicken/Nonthaburi/NIAH2879/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167128 A/quail/Phathumthani/NIAH2711/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167127 A/duck/PhangNga/NIAH181/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167126 A/chicken/Kohn Kaen/NIAH330/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167125 A/chicken/Kalasin/NIAH317/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI167124 A/chicken/Kalasin/NIAH316/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165827 A/chicken/Uthaithani/NIAH6-3-0007/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165825 A/duck/Uthaithani/NIAH6-3-0008/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165824 A/chicken/Nakornsawan/NIAH6-3-0009/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165823 A/chicken/Sukhothai/NIAH6-3-0005/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165822 A/sparrow/Thailand/Phitsanulok-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165821 A/pigeon/Thailand/Uttaradit-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI165820 A/quail/Thailand/Phichit-01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI164834 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD06/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI164333 A/goose/Yunnan/5141/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI164301 A/goose/Yunnan/3798/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI164205 A/muscovy duck/Vietnam/NCVD-69/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160945 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-618/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160697 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD05/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160673 A/chicken/Vietnam/890/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160665 A/chicken/Vietnam/18/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160476 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD-62/07 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160452 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD-59/07 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI160444 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD-58/07 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156641 A/chicken/Thailand/PC-340/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156633 A/chicken/Thailand/NS-339/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156628 A/chicken/Thailand/NS-342/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156620 A/chicken/Thailand/NS-341/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156489 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD08/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156481 A/duck/Vietnam/942B/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156473 A/chicken/Vietnam/830/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI156232 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-213/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI154807 A/Kalij pheasant/Thailand/vsmu-1/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI154797 A/duck/Thailand/ICRC-V629/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI154539 A/duck/Badung-Bali/05/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI154538 A/chicken/Denpasar/01/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152841 A/duck/Vietnam/NCVD01/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152380 A/Thailand/16/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152300 A/quail/Thailand/CU-330/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152292 A/quail/Thailand/CU-331/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152285 A/quail/Thailand/CU-332/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152277 A/quail/Thailand/CU-333/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152269 A/watercock/Thailand/CU-334/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152249 A/watercock/Thailand/CU-319/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152247 A/quail/Thailand/CU-320/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI152245 A/chicken/Thailand/CU-321/06 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI141540 A/duck/Vietnam/942A/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI141532 A/duck/Vietnam/7A/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI140735 A/Muscovy duck/Vietnam/49/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI140695 A/duck/Vietnam/38/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI140687 A/duck/Vietnam/37/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI140567 A/Muscovy duck/Vietnam/1455/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI140341 A/chicken/Viet Nam/14/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136827 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-195/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136825 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-V586/2008 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136185 A/chicken/Yunnan/1252/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136166 A/chicken/Yunnan/1251/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136147 A/chicken/Yunnan/1083/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136128 A/duck/Yunnan/662/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136109 A/chicken/Yunnan/564/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136090 A/duck/Yunnan/215/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136071 A/duck/Yunnan/119/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI136052 A/chicken/Yunnan/1215/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI135957 A/duck/Hunan/1386/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI135824 A/silky chicken/Shantou/475/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI135672 A/pheasant/Shantou/40/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI135501 A/goose/Shantou/753/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI135482 A/duck/Shantou/700/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI135463 A/partridge/Shantou/478/2002 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI132113 A/turkey/Saudi Arabia/6732-6/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI131996 A/chicken/Vietnam/15/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI127340 A/India/m777/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI126162 A/chicken/Thailand/ICRC-V143/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI126139 A/clouded leopard/Thailand/KU-11/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124881 A/chicken/Nigeria/1071-22/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124845 A/chicken/Nigeria/1071-10/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124457 A/Indonesia/546bH/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124438 A/Indonesia/560H/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124370 A/Indonesia/546H/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124368 A/Indonesia/536H/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124366 A/Indonesia/535H/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124347 A/Indonesia/538H/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI124328 A/Indonesia/534H/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123640 A/Chicken/Pidie/BPPV1/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123637 A/Duck/IBufeleng/BPPV1/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123635 A/Duck/Madiun/BBVW1358/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123633 A/Duck/Pali/BBVW1358/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123614 A/Chicken/Medan/BPPV1-498/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123612 A/Chicken/Pidie/BPPV1/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123610 A/chicken/Medan/BPPV1-534/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123594 A/Chicken/Langkat/BBPV1-576/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123592 A/Chicken/Langkat/BBPV1-576/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123591 A/Chicken/Medan/BBPV1-576/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123590 A/Chicken/Medan/BBPV1-571/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123519 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004(H5N1)) isolate escape mutant m777/1 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123517 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004(H5N1)) isolate escape mutant m777/1 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123515 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123513 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123511 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123509 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123507 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123505 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123503 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123501 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123499 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123497 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123495 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123404 A/chicken/Vietnam/TY31/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123402 A/chicken/Vietnam/TY25/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123400 A/chicken/Vietnam/TY9/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123396 A/chicken/Vietnam/G04/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123394 A/duck/Vietnam/5082/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123392 A/duck/Vietnam/5004/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123390 A/duck/Vietnam/5003/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI123388 A/duck/Vietnam/5001/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117926 A/chicken/Thailand/vsmu-3-BKK/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117676 A/chicken/Sukhothai/NIAH6-3-0018/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117674 A/chicken/Phitsanulok/NIAH6-3-0017/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117672 A/chicken/Phitsanulok/NIAH6-3-0011/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117670 A/chicken/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3-0015/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117668 A/chicken/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3-0014/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117666 A/chicken/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3-0013/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117664 A/chicken/Uthaiyhani/NIAH6-3-0012/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117662 A/chicken/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-3-0011/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117660 A/chicken/Nakornsawan/NIAH6-3-0009/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117658 A/duck/Uthaithani/NIAH6-3-0008/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117656 A/duck/Phitsanulok/NIAH6-2-0044/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117654 A/duck/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-2-0043/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117652 A/duck/Phitsanulok/NIAH6-2-0042/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117650 A/duck/Kamphaengphet/NIAH6-2-0041/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117648 A/duck/Phetchabun/NIAH6-2-0040/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117626 A/clouded leopard/Chonburi/AI-1216A/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117624 A/chicken/Suphanburi/137/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117133 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD05/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117131 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD01/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117129 A/Muscovy Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD02/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117127 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD04/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117125 A/Chicken/Viet Nam/NCVD09/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117123 A/Chicken/Viet Nam/NCVD10/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117121 A/Chicken/Viet Nam/NCVD12/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117119 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD06/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117117 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD07/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI117115 A/Duck/Viet Nam/NCVD08/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116533 A/Thailand/Chaiyaphum/622/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116529 A/chicken/Laos/44/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116527 A/chicken/Laos/7192/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116525 A/chicken/Laos/7191/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116521 A/Thailand/Kan353/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116519 A/Thailand/SP83/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116517 A/chicken/Viet Nam/1/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116515 A/Thailand/16/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116511 A/chicken/Viet Nam/Ncvd31/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116507 A/Viet Nam/1204/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116505 A/Viet Nam/1203/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116501 A/Hong Kong/213/2003 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116482 A/Prachinburi/6231/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116174 A/duck/Phitsanulok/NIAH6-5-0001/2007 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI116168 A/chicken/Phichit/NIAH6-4-0001/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115465 A/goose/Cambodia/022b/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115463 A/chicken/Cambodia/022LC3b/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115454 A/goose/Cambodia/28/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115452 A/chicken/Cambodia/7/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115450 A/chicken/Cambodia/1/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115360 A/chicken/Thailand/2/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115185 A/Cambodia/JP52a/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115181 A/Viet Nam/HN30408/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115179 A/Viet Nam/JPHN30321/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI115165 A/Viet Nam/JP178/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI114726 A/tiger/Thailand/VSMU-23-CBI/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI114724 A/tiger/Thailand/VSMU-11-SPB/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI114718 A/brown-headed gull/Thailand/VSMU-28-SPK/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI114668 A/tree sparrow/Thailand/VSMU-16-RBR/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI113300 A/Owston's civet/Vietnam/1/2005 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110926 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBA0627May/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110924 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD3616M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110922 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD3516M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110920 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD4411M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110918 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD4211M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110916 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD4011M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110914 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBA2911M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110912 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBA2811M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110910 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBA2611M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110908 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD3509M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110906 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD3309M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110904 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD3209M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110902 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD3009M/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110900 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD2416F/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110898 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD2316F/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110896 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD1821J/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110894 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD1721J/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110892 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD1621J/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110890 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD1421J/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110888 A/open-billed stork/Nakhonsawan/BBD1221J/05 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110886 A/open-billed stork/Bangkok/LBD0511F/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110884 A/open-billed stork/Bangkok/LBD0111F/04 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI110710 A/Thailand/1(KAN-1A)/2004 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI109437 A/chicken/Thailand/PC-168/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108513 A/duck/Yunnan/2113/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108499 A/duck/Yunnan/3278/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108479 A/duck/Yunnan/2099/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108477 A/duck/Yunnan/2075/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108475 A/goose/Yunnan/1779/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108455 A/duck/Guangxi/1979/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108445 A/goose/Yunnan/3359/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108427 A/goose/Yunnan/3479/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108421 A/duck/Yunnan/3299/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108419 A/chicken/Yunnan/3225/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108407 A/goose/Yunnan/2398/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108399 A/goose/Yunnan/1770/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108359 A/duck/Guiyang/2011/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108347 A/duck/Guangxi/1919/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108345 A/goose/Guangxi/1786/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)
EPI108343 A/chicken/Guangxi/1212/2006 (A/H5N1) segment 4 (HA) 27.0 7.857785e+00 14/14 (100%)

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 10:00 am 
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A scientist whose work was deemed too dangerous to publish by US biosecurity advisers has revealed for the first time how he created a hybrid bird flu virus that is spread easily by coughs and sneezes.

In a conference presentation that was webcasted live to the public on Tuesday, he has detailed how his team created the deadly virus.

Professor Yoshihiro Kawaoka at the University of Wisconsin-Madison described experiments that pinpointed four genetic mutations enabling the virus to spread between ferrets kept in neighbouring cages. The animals are considered the best models of how the infection might spread between people.

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Professor of pathobiological sciences and virologist Yoshihiro Kawaoka. Photo: University of Wisconsin-Madison

In December, the US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) called for key sections of Kawaoka's work to be deleted from a paper in press at the British science journal Nature, amid fears that a rogue state or bioterrorist group might use the information to create a biological weapon.

The NSABB raised similar concerns over a paper by Dr Ron Fouchier at Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam. That study, describing another mutant bird flu strain that can also be spread through the air between ferrets, is under consideration at the US journal Science.

The controversy over the papers triggered a rare crisis in science. Many researchers argued the work must be made fully public so it is available to other experts in the field, such as surveillance teams looking for emergent pandemic strains in Asia and elsewhere. Others said the work should never have been done, or that sensitive details should be shared only with a list of approved experts.

The advisory board reversed its stance last Friday after considering updated versions of the papers and a fresh risk analysis of the studies at a meeting at the National Institutes of Health in Washington DC. The board unanimously approved Kawaoka's paper for publication in full, and gave the green light to Fouchier's work after a vote of 12 to 6 in favour. Neither paper had information removed for the review.

Bird flu is considered particularly threatening to people because more than half of the 600 or so people known to have caught the virus have died from the infection. Many scientists fear the virus could trigger a devastating pandemic if it evolved into a form that spread rapidly from person to person.

The experiments by Kawaoka and Fouchier were designed to answer the crucial question of whether the bird flu virus could pick up genetic mutations in the wild that would allow it to adapt to humans and spread rapidly like seasonal flu.

Speaking at a UK Royal Society conference on bird flu which was webcast, Kawaoka and Fouchier claimed their work highlighted how easily bird flu could mutate into a form that would potentially be transmissible among humans.

But their findings showed the mutant strains did not spread as swiftly as seasonal flu, and were not lethal to animals that caught the infection from a neighbouring animal. Both viruses could be controlled by antiviral drugs, such as Tamiflu, and bird flu vaccines, the researchers added.

Kawaoka created a hybrid flu strain by merging H5N1 bird flu with the "swine flu" virus that caused a pandemic in humans in 2009. Through a series of experiments in ferrets, he isolated a strain with four mutations that helped the virus latch on to and infect cells in the throat. One reason bird flu does not spread well between people is that it cannot bind to cells in the throat and nose, where it can be coughed and sneezed out.

Defending the work, Kawaoka said is was carried out in a high-security laboratory where all of the staff had been vetted by the FBI. The work was "important for pandemic preparedness" and emphasised the need for countries to stockpile vaccines to combat bird flu.

One of the mutations is already common in the wild, Kawaoka said, appearing in all 46 viruses isolated from people in Egypt between 2009 and 2011. "The risk is out there in nature," Kawaoka said.

Fouchier told the conference he was unable to reveal full details of his own research because the Dutch government has imposed export controls on the information. His team created a mutant strain of H5N1 bird flu by infecting a succession of ferrets until a strain emerged that spread between animals housed in neighbouring cages. Ferrets that had already been exposed to flu viruses were not affected by the mutant strain.

Fouchier was unable to confirm the specific mutations that made the virus more transmissible, but said many had already been spotted in the wild. "Most of the mutations we found we can see in the field, and we are even seeing them in combination," he said.

"We are looking for strains of mutants that are associated with particular biological traits," Fouchier added. "Just as we want to predict tsunamis and earthquakes, we want to predict pandemics."


Read more: http://www.watoday.com.au/technology/sc ... z1r51whHkv

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