https://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/84505ee9-ee5b-4b41-b97d-8a981a88a0e2/VIRUS-influenza-swine-flu-4_xlarge.jpghttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/influenza-virus/-/medias/84505ee9-ee5b-4b41-b97d-8a981a88a0e2/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/influenza-virus/-/medias/84505ee9-ee5b-4b41-b97d-8a981a88a0e2/price
Swine Flu #3
Two influenza strains combine in a pig to create new reassortant. The green and purple virions are shown infecting a cell (pink cytoplasm and purple nucleus). Their genetic material reassorts giving rise to a new flu strain (blue) that can spread from person to person as in the new Mexican H1N1 swine flu.
https://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/b61718d6-cf61-4583-8219-9d780602ab95/VIRUS-influenza-swine-flu-3_xlarge.jpghttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/influenza-virus/-/medias/b61718d6-cf61-4583-8219-9d780602ab95/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/influenza-virus/-/medias/b61718d6-cf61-4583-8219-9d780602ab95/price
https://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/38b40aaf-f30c-4560-bcbe-e83af952d54c/VIRUS-influenza-swine-flu-2_xlarge.jpghttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/influenza-virus/-/medias/38b40aaf-f30c-4560-bcbe-e83af952d54c/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/influenza-virus/-/medias/38b40aaf-f30c-4560-bcbe-e83af952d54c/price