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Milk glands in many mammals have receptors for H5N1 — a cow standing in a field

Milk glands in many mammals have receptors for H5N1CEFR B1

10 Dec 2025

Adapted from Dave Roepke-Iowa State, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by Peter Hoogmoed, Unsplash

Level B1 – Intermediate
3 min
174 words

Researchers have been studying whether mammals other than poultry can host H5N1. A new study in the Journal of Dairy Science examined mammary gland tissue from pigs, sheep, goats, beef cattle, alpacas and humans. The team included scientists from the ISU College of Veterinary Medicine and the USDA National Animal Disease Center in Ames.

The tissues contained sialic acid receptors, a sugar on cell surfaces that influenza viruses use to attach to and enter cells. Lead author Rahul Nelli said the study aimed to determine whether transmission among these mammals and humans is possible, and the results indicate that it is. A prior study showed dairy cattle udders have high sialic acid levels, which may explain rapid spread among herds.

Only a few infections have been reported so far in the animals tested, but testing is limited. In infected dairy herds, cows can shed virus into raw milk. The USDA is conducting nationwide surveillance of raw cow milk, and pasteurization kills the virus. Study authors call for increased surveillance and steps to limit spread.

Difficult words

  • mammary gland tissuetissue that produces or supports milk in mammals
  • sialic acid receptormolecule on cells that viruses can bind
    sialic acid receptors
  • transmissionthe process of a disease passing between individuals
  • surveillancecareful monitoring to find disease or problems
    nationwide surveillance, increased surveillance
  • pasteurizationheating milk to kill harmful germs and viruses
  • shedto release or send out from the body
  • udderthe part of a cow that contains the teats
    udders

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Milk glands in many mammals have receptors for H5N1 — English Level B1 | LingVo.club