Obesity-Related Microenvironment Promotes Emergence of Virulent Influenza Virus Strains
Rebekah Honce, Erik A. Karlsson, Nicholas Wohlgemuth, Leonardo D. Estrada, Victoria Meliopoulos, Jiangwei Yao, Stacey Schultz‐Cherry
Abstract
Currently, 50% of the adult population worldwide is overweight or obese. In these studies, we demonstrate that obesity not only enhances the severity of influenza infection but also impacts viral diversity. The altered microenvironment associated with obesity supports a more diverse viral quasispecies and affords the emergence of potentially pathogenic variants capable of inducing greater disease severity in lean hosts. This is likely due to the impaired interferon response, which is seen in both obese mice and obesity-derived human bronchial epithelial cells, suggesting that obesity, aside from its impact on influenza virus pathogenesis, permits the stochastic accumulation of potentially pathogenic viral variants, raising concerns about its public health impact as the prevalence of obesity continues to rise.