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IMAG/MSM Working Group on Multiscale Modeling and Viral Pandemics Mini Seminars

March 24, 2022

Welcome - The meeting will start at 3PM ET

 

NOTE: THE MEETING WILL BE RECORDED, STREAMED AND PUBLICLY AVAILABLE�FOR THOSE MEMBERS UNABLE TO ATTEND

Agenda

  1. Welcome
  2. Links, people, other info
  3. Social media links
  4. Quick Announcements
  5. Upcoming Mini-Seminars and Request for Future Speakers
  6. Susan A Shriner, Wildlife Disease Dynamics, Epidemiology, and Response Project, USDA APHIS WS National Wildlife Research Center. �Influenza infections dynamics in wild birds.
  7. Request for Further Business

 

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People

Co-Lead: Reinhard Laubenbacher, PhD

Department of Medicine

Laboratory for Systems Medicine

University of Florida

reinhard.laubenbacher@medicine.ufl.edu

Co-Lead: James A. Glazier, PhD

Dept. of Intelligent Systems Engineering and Biocomplexity Institute

Indiana University, Bloomington

jaglazier@gmail.com

Web Administration, Slack: James P. Sluka, PhD

Dept. of Intelligent Systems Engineering and Biocomplexity Institute

Indiana University, Bloomington

jsluka@indiana.edu

Activities Coordination: Lorenzo Veschini, PhD

King’s College London

lorenzo.veschini@gmail.com

 

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Please follow the�group on Twitter!

https://twitter.com/MsmViral

If you could re-tweet the weekly announcements �(there are usually two, one for each speaker) �that would help boost attendance and community awareness.

 

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Announcements

Any short (~1 minute) items such as;

  • announcements
  • meetings
  • funding
  • publications
  • requests for help

 

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Schedule for Upcoming Meetings and mini-Seminars

March 31:

  1. TBD
  2. TBD

April 7:

  1. Jonas Hue, King’s College.
  2. Yuefan Deng, Stonybrook, “Multi-scale and Machine Learning Algorithms for Modeling Large Blood Clots”

April 14:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Request for future speakers (March 31, …)

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Rules of the Meeting

Please mute your microphone and hold questions until after the presentations

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Mini-SeminarInfluenza infections dynamics in wild birds

Susan A ShrinerWildlife Disease Dynamics, Epidemiology, and Response Project, USDA APHIS WS National Wildlife Research Center

Influenza A viruses (IAVs) are endemic in wild birds but can spillover into poultry and cause serious economic harm. Quantifying infection kinetics is critical to developing predictive disease models aimed at understanding pathogen spread in an effort to prevent spillover. In this study, we evaluated whether IAV exposure dose mediates infection dynamics in mallards, a common IAV reservoir host. We experimentally inoculated 3 groups of 10 mallards with either 103, 104, or 105 EID50 of an H6N2 IAV collected from North American waterfowl during surveillance operations. Each inoculated mallard was housed with three naïve contacts. We collected fine scale viral RNA shedding information throughout the infection in a scheme designed to capture the eclipse, exponential growth, and waning phases of infection. All samples were tested by qPCR. We compared viral RNA output curves by assessing viral RNA peak load, total load, peak day, and shedding period for each dosage group. We modeled log-transformed cumulative viral loads using an exponential asymptote function. In general, viral RNA shedding patterns varied across each of the metrics evaluated with significant individual heterogeneity evident across individuals. On average, the infection curves for mallards inoculated at 104 and 105 EID50 were more similar to each other than the infection curves of the birds infected at 103, suggesting a possible saturation effect at higher exposure doses. In a subsequent experiment, we examined environmental transmission by inoculating a focal mallard and assessing infections in contact ducks added and removed at regular intervals throughout the infection. We replicated this scenario five times. Modeling results indicate that water is the primary driver of transmission and that the concentration of virus in the water is predictive of transmission. We also found that transmission probability varied over time and that mallards became infected at relatively low concentrations of virus in water. As a second follow-up experiment, we collected blood samples from 28 experimentally infected mallards for more than 18 months post exposure to test for antibodies at approximately 4-week intervals. We re-infected the same individuals with the same virus and dose after a year to investigate long-term homosubtypic immunity. After the initial infection, more than half of the ducks exhibited detectable antibodies on day 7 and all ducks were positive on day 10 and remained so through day 28. By day 56, only 39% of ducks were positive by ELISA. Only three individuals had detectable antibodies throughout the year. After the re-challenge, most ducks were antibody positive on day 4, all were antibody positive by day 10, and nearly 70% still showed detectable antibodies on day 140. These results are consistent with an anamnestic response (i.e., a more rapid production of antibodies in greater titers and persistent over a longer time period). Female mallards consistently showed a stronger ELISA response compared to males, but this difference was minor with respect to the percent of positive individuals. Overall, these results indicate antibodies may only be detectable in the short-term in many individuals, but a strong humoral memory may be present. These results have important implications for interpreting surveillance schemes based on serology and shed light on seasonal strain dynamics in mallards.

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Requests for Input/Suggestions

  

 

We would like the subgroup leads to prepare brief presentations for the Thursday meetings, please let us know when you would like to present

Ideas/help for publicising our Thursday mini-seminars more effectively and for speakers to invite

Suggestions for agenda items and approaches to organizing the Steering Committee Meetings more effectively

There have also been a number of requests for more explicit statements of goals and tasks from the WG leadership, we would appreciate your suggestions

Please contact Reinhard Laubenbacher, James Glazier, James Sluka or Bruce Shapiro with your ideas on all of these issues

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