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Natural sciences
- Microbiology
- Systems biology
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Medical and health sciences
- Laboratory medicine
- Microbiology
- Laboratory medicine
- Laboratory medicine
- Microbiology
The main research questions and aims are:
-To maintain an up-to-date picture of the influenza virus subtypes and genotypes that are widespread in swine in Flanders; to compare the situation with that in other European countries, North America and Asia
-To compare currently circulating swine influenza viruses with those of the past, as well as with human influenza viruses
-Timely identification of new and emerging influenza viruses in pigs, as well as rapid detection of viral mutations or reassortment events in pigs
-To have a collection of viruses for applied and fundamental experimental research
-How does the increasing diversity of swine influenza viruses affect pathogenesis and virulence for the natural host?
-To examine the prevalence and titers of protective antibodies against antigenically diverse H1N1 and H1N2 swine influenza viruses from the major circulating lineages in people of different age categories
-To what extent does the pathogenesis of (swine) influenza viruses differ in swine, the ferret model and humans?
-Can the ferret transmission model be improved so as to give more reliable indications for the ability of swine influenza viruses to spread between humans via the air?
-Indications as to the determinants (e.g. amino acid signatures in the viral HA or specific genetic constellations/reassortants) of influenza virus adaptation to pigs and humans
-A more accurate assessment of the risk to public health of various swine influenza viruses