Infographic

Infographic: How H1N1 Came to Spark a Pandemic in 2009

The pathogen known as swine flu evolved in pigs in Mexico following imports of the livestock from the US and Europe.

Martha Nelson, an evolutionary biologist in the Intramural Research Program at the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
| 2 min read

In early 2009, a virus with an unusual genome popped up in people in central Mexico. It had pieces derived from three different swine influenza lineages, including a Eurasian lineage not previously observed in the Americas.

Beginning in the 1990s, millions of US pigs were trucked into Mexico, some of which carried classical H1N1 and triple-reassortant H3N2 viruses that then spread across the country’s northern, central, and eastern regions. Around the same time, at least once and possibly twice, Eurasian swine viruses were imported from Europe to central Mexico. There, American- and European-origin viruses exchanged genetic material to create the pathogen that jumped to humans in early 2009.

A history of viral reassortment

The genome of the H1N1 virus that jumped to humans in 2009 included two segments from a Eurasian lineage, one segment from a classical lineage, and five segments from the “triple-reassortant” lineage, itself the product of viral ...

Interested in reading more?

Become a Member of

The Scientist Logo
Receive full access to more than 35 years of archives, as well as TS Digest, digital editions of The Scientist, feature stories, and much more!
Already a member? Login Here