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Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks

The genetic characterization of hepatitis A virus (HAV) strains is commonly accomplished by sequencing subgenomic regions, such as the VP1/P2B junction. HAV genome is not extensively variable, thus presenting opportunity for sharing sequences of subgenomic regions among genetically unrelated isolate...

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Autores principales: Vaughan, Gilberto, Xia, Guoliang, Forbi, Joseph C., Purdy, Michael A., Rossi, Lívia Maria Gonçalves, Spradling, Philip R., Khudyakov, Yury E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3819349/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24223112
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074546
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author Vaughan, Gilberto
Xia, Guoliang
Forbi, Joseph C.
Purdy, Michael A.
Rossi, Lívia Maria Gonçalves
Spradling, Philip R.
Khudyakov, Yury E.
author_facet Vaughan, Gilberto
Xia, Guoliang
Forbi, Joseph C.
Purdy, Michael A.
Rossi, Lívia Maria Gonçalves
Spradling, Philip R.
Khudyakov, Yury E.
author_sort Vaughan, Gilberto
collection PubMed
description The genetic characterization of hepatitis A virus (HAV) strains is commonly accomplished by sequencing subgenomic regions, such as the VP1/P2B junction. HAV genome is not extensively variable, thus presenting opportunity for sharing sequences of subgenomic regions among genetically unrelated isolates. The degree of misrepresentation of phylogenetic relationships by subgenomic regions is especially important for tracking transmissions. Here, we analyzed whole-genome (WG) sequences of 101 HAV strains identified from 4 major multi-state, food-borne outbreaks of hepatitis A in the Unites States and from 14 non-outbreak-related HAV strains that shared identical VP1/P2B sequences with the outbreak strains. Although HAV strains with an identical VP1/P2B sequence were specific to each outbreak, WG were different, with genetic diversity reaching 0.31% (mean 0.09%). Evaluation of different subgenomic regions did not identify any other section of the HAV genome that could accurately represent phylogenetic relationships observed using WG sequences. The identification of 2–3 dominant HAV strains in 3 out of 4 outbreaks indicates contamination of the implicated food items with a heterogeneous HAV population. However, analysis of intra-host HAV variants from eight patients involved in one outbreak showed that only a single sequence variant established infection in each patient. Four non-outbreak strains were found closely related to strains from 2 outbreaks, whereas ten were genetically different from the outbreak strains. Thus, accurate tracking of HAV strains can be accomplished using HAV WG sequences, while short subgenomic regions are useful for identification of transmissions only among cases with known epidemiological association.
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spelling pubmed-38193492013-11-12 Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks Vaughan, Gilberto Xia, Guoliang Forbi, Joseph C. Purdy, Michael A. Rossi, Lívia Maria Gonçalves Spradling, Philip R. Khudyakov, Yury E. PLoS One Research Article The genetic characterization of hepatitis A virus (HAV) strains is commonly accomplished by sequencing subgenomic regions, such as the VP1/P2B junction. HAV genome is not extensively variable, thus presenting opportunity for sharing sequences of subgenomic regions among genetically unrelated isolates. The degree of misrepresentation of phylogenetic relationships by subgenomic regions is especially important for tracking transmissions. Here, we analyzed whole-genome (WG) sequences of 101 HAV strains identified from 4 major multi-state, food-borne outbreaks of hepatitis A in the Unites States and from 14 non-outbreak-related HAV strains that shared identical VP1/P2B sequences with the outbreak strains. Although HAV strains with an identical VP1/P2B sequence were specific to each outbreak, WG were different, with genetic diversity reaching 0.31% (mean 0.09%). Evaluation of different subgenomic regions did not identify any other section of the HAV genome that could accurately represent phylogenetic relationships observed using WG sequences. The identification of 2–3 dominant HAV strains in 3 out of 4 outbreaks indicates contamination of the implicated food items with a heterogeneous HAV population. However, analysis of intra-host HAV variants from eight patients involved in one outbreak showed that only a single sequence variant established infection in each patient. Four non-outbreak strains were found closely related to strains from 2 outbreaks, whereas ten were genetically different from the outbreak strains. Thus, accurate tracking of HAV strains can be accomplished using HAV WG sequences, while short subgenomic regions are useful for identification of transmissions only among cases with known epidemiological association. Public Library of Science 2013-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3819349/ /pubmed/24223112 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074546 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vaughan, Gilberto
Xia, Guoliang
Forbi, Joseph C.
Purdy, Michael A.
Rossi, Lívia Maria Gonçalves
Spradling, Philip R.
Khudyakov, Yury E.
Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks
title Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks
title_full Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks
title_fullStr Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks
title_short Genetic Relatedness among Hepatitis A Virus Strains Associated with Food-Borne Outbreaks
title_sort genetic relatedness among hepatitis a virus strains associated with food-borne outbreaks
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3819349/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24223112
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074546
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