• Influenza viruses are almost always circulating among humans. The nature of the virus means that every year, the virus’s genetic material undergoes some minor changes, rendering it a little different from the virus of the previous year. So scientists have to guess which changes are likely to survive the next year, and design or update their vaccines accordingly.
  • Terrence Tumpey first generated ‘recombinant’ viruses. These are artificial viruses generated in the laboratory such that they contained just the H1 and N1 gene segments from the 1918 strain, while the remaining pieces of the genetic material came from a regular laboratory strain that did not cause severe disease (in mice).
  • All the experiments that Tumpey had conducted until then were suggestive, not conclusive. He had inserted pieces of the 1918 H1N1 virus inside a regular laboratory strain and found that doing so increased the virulence of the laboratory strain.