Sreenivasan co-authored a paper on those findings that was published in the international journal Veterinary Microbiology last year. In ongoing work, she and her colleagues have also identified antibodies in horses. For her work, she has received the Joseph P. Nelson Graduate Scholarship Award that recognizes original scientifc research.
“The virus has not been shown to be pathogenic in humans. No one should be afraid of this,” professor Radhey Kaushik said. SDSU alumnus Ben Hause, now a research assistant professor at Kansas State University, discovered the virus, which he identified and characterized as part of his doctoral work under tutelage of his research adviser, professor Feng Li. Li and Kaushik secured a National Institutes of Health grant for nearly $400,000 to continue this work. Both faculty members have joint appointments in the biology and microbiology and veterinary and biomedical sciences departments at South Dakota State.
Ultimately, the goal is to determine whether the virus can cause problems in humans, he explained. “If the virus can undergo reassortment in combination with a closely related human influenza virus, it may be able to form a new strain that could pose more of a threat to humans.”
Identifying animal model, studying virulence Using the bovine Influenza D strain, Sreenivasan proved that the guinea pig could be used as an animal model to study the virus. Though guinea pigs showed no symptoms, she successfully isolated antigens in tracheal and lung tissues. In addition, her research showed the virus is spread only through direct contact. Those results were published in the Journal of Virology, with Sreenivasan as the first author of the article.
Her current study uses the guinea pig model to compare virulence among bovine and swine Influenza D strains and human influenza C. She has just begun analyzing the data. Influenza D has about 50 percent similarity to human influenza C, Sreenivasan explained.
“Human C affects mostly children,” she said, noting that the most common symptom is a runny nose. “It’s not a serious disease. We all have some antibodies because we were infected as children.”
In addition, she is developing a way to study the virus in living cells—trachea and lung epithelial cells from swine and cattle. “I isolate the cells and allow them to grow and then infect them to study the genetic and biologic characteristics,” she said. Thus far, she’s completed the swine cell cultures and will now begin work on bovine cells. Using the in vitro culturing system, Sreenivasan said, “We will see how the virus attaches and what the receptors are.”
About South Dakota State UniversityFounded in 1881, South Dakota State University is the state’s Morrill Act land-grant institution as well as its largest, most comprehensive school of higher education. SDSU confers degrees from eight different colleges representing more than 175 majors, minors and specializations. The institution also offers 32 master’s degree programs, 15 Ph.D. and two professional programs. The work of the university is carried out on a residential campus in Brookings, at sites in Sioux Falls, Pierre and Rapid City, and through Cooperative Extension offices and Agricultural Experiment Station research sites across the state.
Journal Link: Journal of virology, 2015 9 (23):11990-2001 Journal Link: Veterinary Microbiology 180 (3-4):281-285