Literature DB >> 16707047

Co-infections of adenovirus species in previously vaccinated patients.

Gary J Vora1, Baochuan Lin, Kevin Gratwick, Carolyn Meador, Christian Hansen, Clark Tibbetts, David A Stenger, Marina Irvine, Donald Seto, Anjan Purkayastha, Nikki E Freed, Marylou G Gibson, Kevin Russell, David Metzgar.   

Abstract

Despite the success of the adenovirus vaccine administered to US military trainees, acute respiratory disease (ARD) surveillance still detected breakthrough infections (respiratory illnesses associated with the adenovirus serotypes specifically targeted by the vaccine). To explore the role of adenoviral co-infection (simultaneous infection by multiple pathogenic adenovirus species) in breakthrough disease, we examined specimens from patients with ARD by using 3 methods to detect multiple adenoviral species: a DNA microarray, a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and a multiplex PCR assay. Analysis of 52 samples (21 vaccinated, 31 unvaccinated) collected from 1996 to 2000 showed that all vaccinated samples had co-infections. Most of these co-infections were community-acquired serotypes of species B1 and E. Unvaccinated samples primarily contained only 1 species (species E) associated with adult respiratory illness. This study highlights the rarely reported phenomenon of adenoviral co-infections in a clinically relevant environment suitable for the generation of new recombinational variants.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16707047      PMCID: PMC3373024          DOI: 10.3201/eid1206.050245

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis        ISSN: 1080-6040            Impact factor:   6.883


Adenoviruses cause an estimated 8% of clinically relevant viral disease globally (1). Human adenoviruses (HAdVs) are divided into 51 serotypes (HAdV-1–HAdV-51) on the basis of type-specific antiserum-mediated neutralization of infectivity (determined primarily by the hexon coat protein and terminal knob portion of the fiber protein) (2) and into 6 species, also referred to as subgenera or subgroups (HAdV-A, B, C, D, E, and F) on the basis of hemagglutination inhibition and biochemical criteria (3–5). Species HAdV-B is further classified into subspecies B1 and B2 (3). In civilian populations, HAdV-B1 serotypes 3, 7, 16, and 21; HAdV-E serotype 4; and 1 member of subspecies HAdV-B2, serotype 14, cause outbreaks of illness ranging from mild febrile respiratory infections and conjunctivitis to potentially lethal disseminated infections in both adults and children (1,6). HAdV-C serotypes 1, 2, 5, and 6 cause locally endemic upper respiratory infections in infants and children (7,8) and occasional outbreaks in adults. Other HAdV species are usually not associated with respiratory disease in otherwise healthy humans. HAdV seems to have found a particularly destructive niche in military training camps. HAdV-B1 serotypes 3, 7, and 21; HAdV-E serotype 4; and HAdV-B2 serotype 14 have caused severe outbreaks of acute respiratory disease (ARD) among military recruits in training centers (9,10). Before initiation of an HAdV vaccination program in 1971, outbreaks occurred regularly, and ≈1 of 6 recruits in affected camps required hospitalization (1). Systematic vaccination of recruits against the 2 most common agents of ARD in the military, HAdV serotypes 4 and 7, decreased HAdV-specific respiratory illness by 95% to 99% and overall respiratory illness rates by 50% to 60% (11–13). Despite this general efficacy, breakthrough infection (infection of vaccinated persons by the vaccine-targeted adenoviral serotypes) was still regularly reported (14). Production of the vaccine was suspended in 1996, at which point vaccination became sporadic until the existing stocks ran out in 1999. ARD rates quickly returned to prevaccine levels, with HAdV as the apparent causal agent. As a result, reintroduction of the vaccine is being actively pursued (15). To explore the possibility that unique HAdV strains were causing ARD in vaccinated persons, throat swab samples were selected from the Naval Health Research Center population-based febrile respiratory illness surveillance collection from vaccinated (n = 21) and unvaccinated (n = 31) recruits who reported ARD from 1996 to 2000. Samples were chosen that had tested positive for serotypes 4 or 7 by culture and serotypic antibody neutralization. The gene coding for the primary adenoviral antigen, the hexon coat protein, was sequenced from these isolates. The sequence data suggested that the detectable serotype 4 and 7 strains apparently responsible for breakthrough infection were the same as those circulating in unvaccinated military and civilian populations (16). In this study, we reanalyze the same set of samples to identify co-infections with multiple HAdV strains and to address what role co-infections may play in breakthrough infection.

Materials and Methods

Sample Collection and Preparation

Samples were collected as throat swabs into viral transport medium from military recruits with ARD at a variety of training camps as previously described (16). The throat swab samples were cultured on A549 cells and tested by using standard serologic methods. Both original swabs and in vitro tissue culture fluid (ITCF) samples were stored at –80°C. Samples that initially tested positive for serotypes 4 or 7 by culture and microneutralization were chosen for analysis and grouped by previous vaccination status. DNA extracts from ITCF samples were collected and used in molecular assays. Collection details and symptom definitions were previously reported (16), and sample details are shown in Table 1 and Table 2. Initially, 13 unidentified (blinded) samples were sent by the Naval Health Research Center to the Naval Research Laboratory personnel for testing. After the initial 13 samples showed a high rate of respiratory HAdV co-infection, primarily in vaccinated persons, an additional 39 samples were tested in an unblinded fashion.
Table 1

Naval Health Research Center data for molecular detection of adenoviral co-infections in vaccinated and unvaccinated patients with febrile respiratory illness*

Original designation†Vaccination dateMicroneu-tralization‡Multiplex PCRSpecies-specific PCR (B, C, E)Sequencing§GenBank accession no.
7151.AV5.V.98.FJ5 Nov 19974B, CB, C, E5, 21AY337237
7137.AV4.V.97.FJ1 Dec 19974EB, E4 variant
7274.AV4.V.98.FJ11 Feb 19984E, BE, B4 vaccine (Δ = 2)AF065062
7307.AV5.V.98.FJ9 Feb 19984C, BB, C, E5
7333.AV4.V.98.FJ25 Mar 19984EE, B4 variantAY337242
4185.AV4.V.97.FLW24 Mar 19974EB, E4 variant, 7hAY337252
4476.AV4.V.97.FLW24 Oct 19974EB, E4 variantAY337249
79.AV4.V.96.GL7 Oct 19964EE4 vaccine (Δ = 3)AF065062
141.AV7.V.96.GL12 Nov 19967BB7d2 (prototype)AY337258
275.AV4.V.97.GL31 Jan 19974EE4 vaccine (Δ = 3)AY337239
1212.AV7.V.97.GL29 Sep 19977BB, E7d2 (Δ = 2)AY337255
1108.AV7.V..97.GL8 Oct 19977E, BB, E7 vaccine (Δ = 0)AF065067
1122.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB7d2 (Δ = 2)AF321311
1150.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB, E7 vaccine (Δ = 2)AY337254
1152.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB7 vaccine (Δ = 1)AY337253
1186.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB, E7d2 (Δ = 2)AF321311
1251.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB7d2 (Δ = 2)AF321311
1275.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB, E7 vaccine (Δ = 1)AY337257
1302.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977BB, E7 vaccine (Δ = 2)AY337256
1649.AV7.V.98.GL13 Jan 19987BB7d2 (Δ = 2)AF321311
1856.AV5.V.98.GL25 Mar 19984CB, C, E5, 7h
60406.AV7.99.FB7BB7 vaccine (Δ = 2)AY337256
60673.AV4.00.FB4EE4 variantAY337237
60691.AV4.00.FB4EE, B4 variantAY337238
60697.AV4.00.FB4EE4 variantAY337246
60708.AV4.00.FB4EE4 variantAY337237
60716.AV4.00.FB4EE4 variantAY337247
CHPPM2.AV4.00.FBEE, B4 variantAY337237
CHPPM9.AV4.00.FB4EE, B4 variantAY337237
CHPPM13.AV4.00.FBEE, B4 variantAY337237
CHPPM29.AV4.00.FB4EE4 variantAY337237
CHPPM44.AV4.00.FB4EE4 variantAY337237
7372.AV5.98.FJ4CB, C, E5, 7h
40098.AV4.98.FJ4EE4 variantAY337241
40160.AV4.98.FJ4EE, B4 variantAY337237
40183.AV4.98.FJ4EE4 variantAY337237
40781.AV4.99.FJ4EE4 variantAY337238
40844.AV4.99.FJ4EE4 variantAY337237
41059.AV4.99.FJ4EE4 variantAY337237
10060.AV4.98.GLEE4 variantAY337237
10190.AV4.98.GL4EE, B4 variantAY337237
10206.AV4.98.GL4EE4 variantAY337244
10213.AV4.98.GL4EE4 variantAY337240
10257.AV4.98.GL4EE4 variantAY337237
10258.AV4.98.GL4EE4 variantAY337237
10756.AV4.00.GL4EE4 variantAY337243
50108.AV4.00.LACEB, E4 variantAY337251
20044.AV4.98.MCRD4EB, E4 variantAY337248
20139.AV4.98.MCRDEE4 variantAY337237
20142.AV4.98.MCRDEE4 variantAY337250
20143.AV4.98.MCRDEE, B4 variantAY337237
20145.AV4.98.MCRDEE4 variantAY337245

*PCR, polymerase chain reaction. Letters or numbers in boldface indicate weak positives.
†Acquisition number, serotype, isolation year, and isolation location.
‡Results are listed as serotypes. Species B1 includes serotypes 3, 7, 16, 21; species C includes serotypes 1, 2, 5, 6; and species E includes serotype 4.
§Variant/vaccine grouping based on the hexon gene sequence defined by Blasiole et al. (16). Δ = # reflects number of base substitutions from vaccine strain in 1,490 bp of the hexon sequence (16). The 7d2 designation is based on that of Blasiole et al. (16). The 7h designation based on fiber gene sequence is as defined by Kajon and Wadell (17).

Table 2

Naval Research Laboratory data for molecular detection of adenoviral co-infections in vaccinated and unvaccinated patients with febrile respiratory illness*

Original designation†Vaccination dateMicroarray‡Adenovirus Consensus kitPCR determination‡
PositiveNegative
7151.AV5.V.98.FJ5 Nov 1997C, 21C, B15, 21B2
7137.AV4.V.97.FJ1 Dec 19974, C, B2E4, 1
7274.AV4.V.98.FJ11 Feb 19984, 21, C, B2E, B1, B24, 21, B2C
7307.AV5.V.98.FJ9 Feb 1998C, 21CC21
7333.AV4.V.98.FJ25 Mar 19984, C, B2E4, 1, 5, B2
4185.AV4.V.97.FLW24 Mar 19974, C, B2E, B2, F, B14, B2C
4476.AV4.V.97.FLW24 Oct 19974, C, B2E, B2, F, B14, 5, B2
79.AV4.V.96.GL7 Oct 19964, C, 7E4, C, B27
141.AV7.V.96.GL12 Nov 19967, 4, 3B1, B2, E7, 4, B23
275.AV4.V.97.GL31 Jan 19974, C, 7E, B2, F, B14, C, B27
1212.AV7.V.97.GL29 Sep 19977, 4, 3B1, E, F7, 4, 3, F
1108.AV7.V..97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4, C, 3B1, E, F7, 4, C3
1122.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, C, 3B17, C3
1150.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4, 3B1, E, F7, 3, F4
1152.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4, 3B17, 43
1186.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4B1, E, F74
1251.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4, 3B1, E, F74, 3
1275.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4, 3B1, E7, 4, 3
1302.AV7.V.97.GL8 Oct 19977, 4, 3B1, E, F7, 43
1649.AV7.V.98.GL13 Jan 19987, 3, 4B17, 34
1856.AV5.V.98.GL25 Mar 1998C, 7CC7
60406.AV7.99.FB7B17
60673.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
60691.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
60697.AV4.00.FB4, CE4, 1
60708.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
60716.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
CHPPM2.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
CHPPM9.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
CHPPM13.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
CHPPM29.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
CHPPM44.AV4.00.FB4, CE4C
7372.AV5.98.FJC, 7CC7
40098.AV4.98.FJ4E, F4, F
40160.AV4.98.FJ4E4
40183.AV4.98.FJ4E4
40781.AV4.99.FJ4, CE, B24, B2C
40844.AV4.99.FJ4, CE, B24, B2C
41059.AV4.99.FJ4, CE, B2, F4, C, B2, F
10060.AV4.98.GL4, C, B2E, B24, B2C
10190.AV4.98.GL4E4
10206.AV4.98.GL4, C, B2E, B24, B2C
10213.AV4.98.GL4, C, B2E, B2, F4, B2
10257.AV4.98.GL4, B2E4, B2
10258.AV4.98.GL4E4
10756.AV4.00.GL4E4
50108.AV4.00.LAC4, B2E4, B2
20044.AV4.98.MCRD4, C, 7, 3E4, 1, B27, 3
20139.AV4.98.MCRD4E4
20142.AV4.98.MCRD4E4
20143.AV4.98.MCRD4, C, B2E, B2, F4, C, B2, F
20145.AV4.98.MCRD4, C, B2E, B2, F4, B2C

*PCR, polymerase chain reaction. Species and serotype are listed in order of predominance. Letters or numbers in boldface indicate weak positives.
†Acquisition number, serotype, isolation year, and isolation location.
‡Results are listed as serotypes or species. Species B1 includes serotypes 3, 7, 16, 21; species C includes serotypes 1, 2, 5, 6; and species E includes serotype 4.

*PCR, polymerase chain reaction. Letters or numbers in boldface indicate weak positives.
†Acquisition number, serotype, isolation year, and isolation location.
‡Results are listed as serotypes. Species B1 includes serotypes 3, 7, 16, 21; species C includes serotypes 1, 2, 5, 6; and species E includes serotype 4.
§Variant/vaccine grouping based on the hexon gene sequence defined by Blasiole et al. (16). Δ = # reflects number of base substitutions from vaccine strain in 1,490 bp of the hexon sequence (16). The 7d2 designation is based on that of Blasiole et al. (16). The 7h designation based on fiber gene sequence is as defined by Kajon and Wadell (17). *PCR, polymerase chain reaction. Species and serotype are listed in order of predominance. Letters or numbers in boldface indicate weak positives.
†Acquisition number, serotype, isolation year, and isolation location.
‡Results are listed as serotypes or species. Species B1 includes serotypes 3, 7, 16, 21; species C includes serotypes 1, 2, 5, 6; and species E includes serotype 4.

Microarray-based Genotyping

One microliter of purified DNA extract from each of the 52 ITCF samples was used as the template in 50-μL degenerate PCR amplifications targeting portions of the E1A, hexon, and fiber genes. The primers, degenerate polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification protocol, probes, and microarray fabrication techniques have been previously described (18). Once constructed, the spotted microarrays were blocked with a 3% bovine serum albumin–casein solution (BSA-C) for 15 min at room temperature, and the slides were outfitted with MAUI Mixer DC hybridization chambers (BioMicro Systems, Salt Lake City, UT, USA). Twenty-microliter hybridization reactions (13.6 μL biotinylated degenerate PCR amplicons, 2 μL 3% BSA-C, 4 μL 20× SSC (0.3 mol/L sodium citrate, 3.0 mol/L NaCl, pH 7.0), and 0.4 μL 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]) were denatured for 3 min at 98°C and immediately applied to the microarrays. Hybridizations were performed for 2 h at 63°C in a MAUI Hybridization System (BioMicro Systems). Slides were then washed twice with 4× SSC-0.2% SDS buffer and 2× SSC buffer, and hybridization was detected by the sequential addition of Cy5-conjugated mouse antibiotin immunoglobulin G (IgG) (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA, USA) and Cy5-conjugated goat antimouse IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch). Images were obtained with a ScanArray Lite confocal laser scanning system (Perkin-Elmer, Torrance, CA, USA) at a laser power of 60 to 80 and a photomultiplier tube gain of 60 to 80. The fluorescent signal from each microarray element was considered positive only when its quantified intensity was >3× that of known internal negative control elements. Each ITCF sample was subjected to 2 to 5 independent amplification and hybridization experiments. Hybridization patterns unique to specific serotypes were determined empirically with prototype strains (18). Although members of species HAdV-B1 often produced complex hybridization profiles (18), these profiles were unique, reproducible, and readily identifiable in both single infections and co-infections.

Adenovirus Consensus PCR–Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay

We used a commercially available kit capable of typing adenoviruses to the species level to confirm the results obtained with microarray analyses. Briefly, the Adenovirus Consensus kit (Argene, North Massapequa, NY, USA) uses a PCR–enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay that amplifies a fragment from the adenovirus virus-associated (VA) RNA gene and subsequently detects and types the amplicon with species-specific biotinylated oligonucleotide probes in a colorimetric microwell format (19). Results obtained with the kit were interpreted according to the manufacturer's adenovirus typing protocol.

Adenovirus-specific PCR

The species-specific PCR amplification was performed with previously published primers (20) and a Multiplex PCR Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions (with 0.5× Q solution). These amplifications were performed in 25-μL reaction volumes at an annealing temperature of 52°C. In general, the PCRs were performed in an iCycler (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA) and analyzed by electrophoresis on 1.5% agarose gels. Monoplex PCR was performed under identical reaction conditions, except that the same primers were used in independent reactions. Sequencing reactions and microneutralization assays were performed as previously described (21,22). Serotype-specific PCR assays (Table 1 and Table 2) were verified as described (20,23–26), with occasional substitutions of polymerase type and annealing temperature adjustments.

Co-infection Separation

Limiting dilutions of ITCF sample 7151 were plated on A549 cells and allowed to adsorb for 16 hours, after which agarose overlays (0.4% agarose in Dulbecco minimal essential medium, 2% fetal bovine serum, 4 mmol/L glutamine) were added to each infected monolayer. Well-separated virus plaques were picked 5 days postinfection, placed into viral transport medium, and tested by PCR for HAdV-B and HAdV-C. A second round of plaque purification was performed on several plaque isolates that were treated with 0.05% Triton-X 100 to potentially disrupt virus clumps before their dilution and plating. After 6 hours of adsorption, the original inoculum was removed, and the monolayers were overlayed with agarose solution. The newly formed plaques were tested as described above.

Results

By using a new 70-mer spotted microarray (18), a PCR–enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (19), and a species-specific multiplex PCR assay (20), we generated data profiles for each of the 52 tissue culture-amplified samples; the raw data from 2 of these samples are shown as representative examples (Figure). The microarray profile of vaccinated sample 7274 detected HAdV-4 (species E), HAdV-21 (species B1), HAdV-C, and HAdV-B2 according to previously validated hybridization patterns (18) (Figure, panel A). Except for detection of an apparent low-level HAdV-C co-infectant, the results of the Adenovirus Consensus kit (HAdV-B1, HAdV-B2, and HAdV-E) (Figure, panel B), multiplex and monoplex species-specific PCR (HAdV-B and HAdV-E) (Figure, panel C), and serotype-specific PCR (HAdV-4, HAdV-21, and HAdV-B2) (Figure, panel D) confirmed the microarray-based identification of multiple adenoviral strains in sample 7274.
Figure

Molecular methods used to identify human adenovirus (HAdV) co-infections. A–D) Vaccinated sample 7274. A) Microarray hybridization profile. White and yellow rectangles indicate low-positive HAdV-C and HAdV-B2 targets, respectively. Spot colors denote hybridization signal intensity (white > yellow > green > blue). Species and corresponding serotype designations are indicated on the left. Probe designations (E1, E2 = serotype-specific E1A probes; H1, H2 = serotype-specific hexon probes; F1, F2 = serotype-specific fiber probes) are indicated above each array. B) Adenovirus Consensus kit optical density values. *, amplification positive. The horizontal line is the manufacturer's significance threshhold. C) Multiplex species-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR). m, molecular mass marker. Species designations are to the right of the corresponding band. D) PCR verification with independent serotype or species-specific primers. E–H) Unvaccinated sample 10756. E) Microarray hybridization profile. F) Adenovirus Consensus kit optical density values. G) Multiplex species-specific PCR. H) PCR verification with independent serotype-specific primers.

Molecular methods used to identify human adenovirus (HAdV) co-infections. A–D) Vaccinated sample 7274. A) Microarray hybridization profile. White and yellow rectangles indicate low-positive HAdV-C and HAdV-B2 targets, respectively. Spot colors denote hybridization signal intensity (white > yellow > green > blue). Species and corresponding serotype designations are indicated on the left. Probe designations (E1, E2 = serotype-specific E1A probes; H1, H2 = serotype-specific hexon probes; F1, F2 = serotype-specific fiber probes) are indicated above each array. B) Adenovirus Consensus kit optical density values. *, amplification positive. The horizontal line is the manufacturer's significance threshhold. C) Multiplex species-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR). m, molecular mass marker. Species designations are to the right of the corresponding band. D) PCR verification with independent serotype or species-specific primers. E–H) Unvaccinated sample 10756. E) Microarray hybridization profile. F) Adenovirus Consensus kit optical density values. G) Multiplex species-specific PCR. H) PCR verification with independent serotype-specific primers. In contrast, the microarray profile of unvaccinated sample 10756 detected a single serotype, HAdV-4 (Figure, panel E). The microarray-based finding was verified by results of the Adenovirus Consensus kit (Figure, panel F), multiplex species-specific PCR (Figure, panel G), and HAdV-4 serotype-specific PCR (Figure, panel H). The data profiles for all 52 samples assembled and compared in this manner are shown in Table 1 and Table 2. Dual, triple, and quadruple infections were found in all 21 of the vaccinated samples and in 14 of the 31 unvaccinated samples tested (Table 1 and Table 2). Previously vaccinated persons showed a high rate of co-infection with both species commonly associated with ARD (HAdV-B1 and HAdV-E), whereas unvaccinated persons were primarily infected with HAdV-E. Since HAdV-4 and HAdV-7 are the 2 most common ARD-associated serotypes, that they were also the most commonly paired respiratory pathogenic co-infectants detected in vaccinated persons is not surprising. When the vaccine was used, the rates of other respiratory adenoviruses were much higher than when the vaccine was not used (16). However, these isolates were chosen for study because they yielded antigenic signals consistent with either HAdV-4 or HAdV-7 and were therefore expected to contain at least 1 of these 2 viruses as the highest titer adenoviral components (Table 1) (16). The ability of the microarray to identify to the serotype level resulted in the detection of the greatest number of co-infections, despite its inability to detect members of species B2 when a co-infecting HAdV-7 was present (hybridization pattern interference) and members of species F that were not targeted (Table 3). Microarray-based identification of multiple ARD-associated serotypes from diverse HAdV-B1 species (serotypes 3, 7, and 21) was necessary because co-infections with these serotypes would not have been indicated or resolved by methods limited to species-level identification.
Table 3

Human adenovirus load detected with molecular identification methods*

MethodStatusNo. samples with X co-infectant strains
X = 1X = 2X = 3X = 4
MicroarrayVaccinated04152
Unvaccinated91651
Adenovirus Consensus kitVaccinated8283
Unvaccinated22540
Multiplex PCRVaccinated17400
Unvaccinated31000
Monoplex PCR†Vaccinated71130
Unvaccinated21910

*PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
†Species-specific PCR from Table 1, Naval Health Research Center data.

*PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
†Species-specific PCR from Table 1, Naval Health Research Center data. Although most apparent co-infections could be verified by each of the primary methods tested and by serotype-specific PCR (e.g., single infections: 10756, 60406, 20142; co-infections: 1212, 7151, 7274), some could not be verified (e.g., 60691, CHPPM2). Those co-infectant signals that could not be verified were usually weak positives. The strains responsible for these signals appeared to be subordinate co-infectants because the predominant serotype or species signals generated for the associated samples by the microarray, Adenovirus Consensus kit, and serotype-specific PCR were corroborated in every case and matched the results obtained from the sequencing experiments previously reported (16). The microarray and Adenovirus Consensus kit use detection and signal amplification techniques that enhance assay sensitivity and thus render them more sensitive than traditional PCR/agarose gel visualization techniques, as shown by the number of triple and quadruple co-infections detected with these techniques (Table 3). Thus, attempting to corroborate these methods with the 3 PCR-based methods used was not completely successful. Nevertheless, most of the positive results from these tests were verified by comparing the microarray and Adenovirus Consensus kit results or by comparison with the results from independent methods such as microneutralization, hexon sequence analysis, serotype-specific PCR that uses primers not used in the multiplex tests, and PCR amplicon sequencing (Table 1, Table 2, and Table 4). These results suggest that these methods can identify and corroborate HAdV co-infections and that, in general, the HAdV load in ARD patients is more complex than previously thought.
Table 4

Human adenovirus (HAdV) species and serotype-specific primers

NameSequenceTarget geneReference
Primer 1CTT GGT CTA CGA CCA GAC GG
Primer 3GTT TGC TCA TGA ACA TGG CCA GAT CGC ACSpecies B2 E3 (26)
F30CTT CAA CCC TGT CTA CCC TAT GAA
F969TTC TCT AAT GTA GTA AAA GGHAdV11 fiber (25)
HsgF1ATT TCT ATT CCT TCG CG
HsgF2TCA GGC TTG GTA CGG CCSpecies F hexon (24)
HsgC1ACC TTT GAC TCT TCT GT
HsgC2TCC TTG TAT TTA GTA TCSpecies C hexon (24)
Ad3FGGT AGA GAT GCT GTT GCA GGA
Ad3RCCC ATC CAT TAG TGT CAT CGG THAdV3 hexon (23)
Ad7FGGA AAG ACA TTA CTG CAG ACA
Ad7RAAT TTC AGG CGA AAA AGC GTC AHAdV7 hexon (23)
Ad21FGAA ATT ACA GAC GGC GAA GCC
Ad21RAAC CTG CTG GTT TTG CGG TTGHAdV21 hexon (23)
Ad4F5GTT GCT AAC TAC GAT CCA GAT ATT G
Ad4R4CCT GGT AAG TGT CTG TCA ATC CHAdV4 hexonThis study
Ad7F-FACA ACT GCC TAT CCT TTC AAT G
Ad7F-RGAC CAA GTT ACA CGA ATA CAA TAT GHAdV7 fiberThis study
Ad5 E1A-F1CCT AAA ATG GCG CCT GCT ATC CTG
Ad5 E1A-R1GCG ACG CCC ACC AAC TCT CACHAdV5 E1AThis study
Ad5 E1A-F2GAG CCT TGG GTC CGG TTT CTA TG
Ad5 E1A-R2CCA TTT TAG GAC GGC GGG TAGHAdV5 E1AThis study
Ad5 hexon-F1GAC GGA GCC AGC ATT AAG TTT GAT
Ad5 hexon-R1GTT GGC GGG TAT AGG GTA GAG CATHAdV5 hexonThis study
Ad5 fiber-F1TAT TCA GCA TCA CCT CCT TTC C
Ad5 fiber-R1AAG CTA TGT GGT GGT GGG GCHAdV5 fiberThis study
AdA1GCT GAA GAA MCW GAA GAA AAT GA
AdA2CRT TTG GTC TAG GGT AAG CACSpecies A fiber (20)
AdB1TST ACC CYT ATG AAG ATG AAA GC
AdB2GGA TAA GCT GTA GTR CTK GGC ATSpecies B fiber (20)
AdC1TAT TCA GCA TCA CCT CCT TTC C
AdC2AAG CTA TGT GGT GGT GGG GCSpecies C fiber (20)
AdD1GAT GTC AAA TTC CTG GTC CAC
AdD2TAC CCG TGC TGG TGT AAA AAT CSpecies D fiber (20)
AdE1TCC CTA CGA TGC AGA CAA CG
AdE2AGT GCC ATC TAT GCT ATC TCCSpecies E fiber (20)
AdF1ACT TAA TGC TGA CAC GGG CAC
AdF2TAA TGT TTG TGT TAC TCC GCT CSpecies F fiber (20)
To determine whether >1 replication-competent serotype or strain was present in the samples with evidence of co-infection, we attempted to physically separate the paired co-infectants in sample 7151 by plaque purification. Of 92 plaques picked from the initial plate, all tested positive for HAdV-C by PCR and 12 of 92 also tested positive for HAdV-B. Several of the plaques that retained both HAdV-B and HAdV-C signals were replaqued, and PCR testing of these plaques yielded only HAdV-C isolates. Further efforts that used a detergent to increase separation within the original ITCF sample 7151 and applied the agarose overlay more quickly (6 hours) to prevent interplaque contamination also yielded only HAdV-C plaques (data not shown).

Discussion

We demonstrate the rarely reported phenomenon of co-infections with multiple adenoviral species. Two previous studies have noted rare instances of HAdV-C dual infections in small numbers (27,28). HAdV-C, although rarely associated with pharyngitis outbreaks in recruits (10), is usually seen in children (7,8) and can produce latent infections that last into young adulthood. This fact, combined with low incidence of co-infection (27,28), has led to the assertion that multistrain adenovirus co-infections are not common (28) or clinically relevant. The results from the population tested in this study suggest otherwise. Samples from vaccinated recruits showed a high rate of co-infection with multiple species of adenovirus associated with adult ARD (HAdV-E and HAdV-B1). Many of the identified co-infectants in this study were species not generally associated with ARD in the military (HAdV-C, HAdV-B2, and HAdV-F). Although these species were not likely the cause of ARD observed in these patients, since they are not believed to cause ARD in adults and because they have a high potential for latent carriage (1,7,8,29), their presence sheds new light on the general complexity of the human adenoviral load. In addition, they remain viable reservoirs capable of genetic complementation or recombination with upper respiratory strains. Recombination can generate new strains with unique and stable phenotypes. Intraspecies adenovirus recombination has been demonstrated in laboratory cell-culture co-infection studies (30–32). These recombination events can generate viable hybrids with intermediate or unique immunogenic and tropic properties. Evidence suggests recombination can generate hybrids in immunocompromised patients (29,33,34), possibly as a result of co-infection with normally isolated serotypes. Recombination, particularly intraspecies, seems to play a major role in the evolution of new, virulent strains of HAdV (1,17,35,36). The currently dominant pathogenic HAdV in US military recruits, a considerably diverged variant HAdV-4 strain (16), appears to be a recent recombinant between HAdV-4 and a HAdV-B1 serotype, probably HAdV-7 (37). Given that these 2 are the most common co-infectants seen in our sample set, this finding suggests that the observed dominance of co-infections in vaccinated persons may have contributed to the emergence of the new variant. In general, the understanding and control of situations that create or promote co-infection may be important considerations. The HAdV vaccine, an enteric-coated live-virus tablet designed to transiently and selectively infect the gastrointestinal tract with normal respiratory HAdV strains, contains viable HAdV-4 and HAdV-7. Thus, we cannot assume whether the detected co-infectants arose from the vaccine itself or from community acquisition of circulating strains. Most HAdV-4 strains in this study are not the vaccine strain but rather a highly divergent variant that has recently been dominant in military training centers (GenBank strain Z-G 95-873). This identity was shown by sequence analysis of 1,500 bp of the hexon gene from many primary infectants identified in the same sample set that was analyzed here (16). The variant HAdV-4 isolates consistently differ from the vaccine strain by 32 base substitutions, including 9 coding changes, in this region (16) (Table 1). Hexon sequence analysis showed that many HAdV-7 co-infectants are HAdV-7d2. HAdV-7d2 is distinguished from the HAdV-7 vaccine strain (HAdV-7a) by a single coding polymorphism in the hexon sequence, but this polymorphism (protein L443Q or nucleotide T1328A in GenBank [16]) is specific to HAdV-7d and HAdV-7d2 and is not found in HAdV-7a, b, c, g, or h or in the vaccine strain (16,38,39). Three of the other HAdV-7 co-infectants (1856, 4185, and 7372) were shown to be HAdV-7h by fiber gene sequencing. The fiber gene of HAdV-7h appears to have been horizontally transferred from HAdV-3 and thus is highly diverged from the usual HAdV-7 fiber gene, as found in the vaccine strain (17). Thus, sequence analyses show that most, if not all, co-infectants are currently circulating HAdV-4 and HAdV-7 strains that are distinct from the vaccine strains (16) (Table 1). Four lines of evidence support the idea that most of the apparent genetic complexity in the throat swab samples comes from multiple strains, as opposed to recombinants with mixed genetic characteristics. The first comes from the microarray data. The microarray tests for hybridization of 6 independent probes designed to match serotype-specific sequences in 3 genes (18). Since different species do not cross-react among the microarray probes, hybridization of genes from 1 species to the identifying probes for 2 species would require redundant presence of 2 different alleles in all 3 genes. Since both natural recombination in hosts (17) and artificially encouraged recombination in cell culture (30,32) strongly favor homologous recombination and generation of nonredundant hybrid strains, redundant characterization of paired, divergent alleles is inconsistent with a single recombinant genome. The second line of evidence supporting co-infection with independent genomes comes from comparisons of relative co-infectant titers before and after potentially selective events, such as growth in tissue culture. PCR amplification of fiber gene sequences using species B- and E-specific primers was performed on serial dilutions of vaccinated sample 7274 before and after passage of the original ITCF through 2 additional cycles of growth in A549 cells. In this instance, the relative titers of HAdV-4 and HAdV-7, as measured by serial-dilution PCR, changed by 2 orders of magnitude (data not shown). The rapid drift in relative concentrations of PCR targets from paired co-infecting strains strongly suggests that the co-infectants' genomes are replicating independently and thus likely to be physically separate entities. The third line of evidence supporting co-infectant independence comes from whole-genome sequencing efforts. Several molecular methods indicated that vaccinated sample 7151 harbored an HAdV-5/HAdV-21 co-infection (Table 1 and Table 2). The genome of the HAdV-5 co-infecting strain was sequenced and assembled into a contiguous sequence (GenBank no. AY601635) consistent with a published HAdV-5 genome (GenBank accession no. AY339865) (40), which suggested no recombination of foreign DNA. However, this effort also generated several orphan sequences that did not fit into the assembled sequence and were subsequently identified as genetically redundant HAdV-21 regions. Further amplification and sequencing of several genetically distant fragments from the same sample using HAdV-21-specific primers yielded ≈2 kb of HAdV-21 sequence. On the basis of the entire genome and partial PCR sequencing analyses, >2 co-infecting HAdV genomes are contained in sample 7151. The fourth line of evidence comes from our attempts to physically separate paired co-infectants by plaque purification. Sample 7151, which contained the HAdV-5/HAdV-21 co-infection, was used initially because it contained relatively equal titers of both co-infectants. Although most of the plaques tested contained HAdV-5, some contained both HAdV-5 and HAdV-21. Although we were unable to identify plaques that contained only HAdV-21, our results demonstrate the physical independence of the co-infecting entities and the functional independence of HAdV-5. Our results also suggest that either the HAdV-21 co-infectant is functionally dependent on HAdV-5 or is effectively outgrown by HAdV-5 to a degree that prevents independent isolation. Similar attempts were made with a few samples that had HAdV-4/HAdV-7 co-infections, but these were generally biased in titer (104 in favor of HAdV-7) and, as expected, yielded only HAdV-7 in >300 plaques tested. The data demonstrated the functional independence of 1 co-infectant (HAdV-7) and physical independence of the co-infecting entities but could not conclusively demonstrate functional independence of the minor co-infectant. Conventional clinical microbiologic methods, including microneutralization and hemagglutination inhibition, are comparative and designed to identify the primary HAdV serotype (or species) in a sample. Secondary infections are masked in these methods by the tests (e.g., microneutralization is reported as the strongest reaction, not the spectrum of reactions across all serotypes). Likewise, direct sequencing (16) may restrict identification to a single strain, particularly if 1 co-infectant is dominant. Restriction enzyme analysis methods are capable of resolving HAdV-C dual infections in which both serotypes are present in similar numbers (27). In contrast, when using sensitive molecular methods that can yield measurable signals from secondary (less numerous) co-infectants against the background of stronger signals produced by primary infecting strains, these methods may identify co-infections more than do conventional methods. In the case of respiratory infections, this finding has previously been documented (41). Finally, each of the methods designed to test for multiple species or serotypes showed a higher number of HAdV (and accepted virulent HAdV species and serotypes) in vaccinated persons than in unvaccinated persons. HAdV vaccine was administered routinely to all trainees until supplies were exhausted, at which point adenovirus vaccination was stopped. Since trainees were vaccinated systematically, persons tended to be sampled at times when either all or no recruits were being vaccinated. Therefore, vaccinated samples collected and tested (from 1996 to 1998) are not concurrent with unvaccinated samples (collected from 1998 to 2000). Because of this sampling limitation, we could not confidently correlate HAdV co-infection with breakthrough infections in previously vaccinated persons. Thus, although this study highlights the previously underappreciated phenomenon of adenoviral co-infection, the conclusive examination of its relationship to vaccination must await reintroduction of HAdV vaccine (15).
  39 in total

1.  Genetic variability of hexon loops 1 and 2 between seven genome types of adenovirus serotype 7.

Authors:  Q Li; G Wadell
Journal:  Arch Virol       Date:  1999       Impact factor: 2.574

2.  Simplified microneutralization test for serotyping adenovirus isolates.

Authors:  M D Malasig; P R Goswami; L K Crawford-Miksza; D P Schnurr; G C Gray
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 5.948

3.  Adult adenovirus infections: loss of orphaned vaccines precipitates military respiratory disease epidemics. For the Adenovirus Surveillance Group.

Authors:  G C Gray; P R Goswami; M D Malasig; A W Hawksworth; D H Trump; M A Ryan; D P Schnurr
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2000-10-04       Impact factor: 9.079

Review 4.  Genetic content and evolution of adenoviruses.

Authors:  Andrew J Davison; Mária Benkő; Balázs Harrach
Journal:  J Gen Virol       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 3.891

5.  The complete nucleotide sequence, genome organization, and origin of human adenovirus type 11.

Authors:  Daniel Stone; Anne Furthmann; Volker Sandig; André Lieber
Journal:  Virology       Date:  2003-04-25       Impact factor: 3.616

Review 6.  THE ROLE OF ADENOVIRUSES IN RESPIRATORY DISEASE.

Authors:  J VAN DER VEEN
Journal:  Am Rev Respir Dis       Date:  1963-09

7.  Type-specific identification of human adenovirus 3, 7, and 21 by a multiplex PCR assay.

Authors:  W Xu; D D Erdman
Journal:  J Med Virol       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 2.327

Review 8.  Molecular epidemiology of adenovirus type 7 in the United States, 1966-2000.

Authors:  Dean D Erdman; Wanhong Xu; Susan I Gerber; Gregory C Gray; David Schnurr; Adriana E Kajon; Larry J Anderson
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 6.883

Review 9.  The impact of adenovirus infection on the immunocompromised host.

Authors:  Tsoline Kojaoghlanian; Phyllis Flomenberg; Marshall S Horwitz
Journal:  Rev Med Virol       Date:  2003 May-Jun       Impact factor: 6.989

10.  Clinical assessment of a generic DNA amplification assay for the identification of respiratory adenovirus infections.

Authors:  S Mitchell; H J O'Neill; G M Ong; S Christie; P Duprex; D E Wyatt; C McCaughey; V J Armstrong; S Feeney; L Metwally; P V Coyle
Journal:  J Clin Virol       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 3.168

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  22 in total

Review 1.  Genomic foundations of evolution and ocular pathogenesis in human adenovirus species D.

Authors:  Ashrafali Mohamed Ismail; Xiaohong Zhou; David W Dyer; Donald Seto; Jaya Rajaiya; James Chodosh
Journal:  FEBS Lett       Date:  2019-12-11       Impact factor: 4.124

2.  Computational analysis of human adenovirus type 22 provides evidence for recombination among species D human adenoviruses in the penton base gene.

Authors:  Christopher M Robinson; Jaya Rajaiya; Michael P Walsh; Donald Seto; David W Dyer; Morris S Jones; James Chodosh
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2009-06-24       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 3.  Adenovirus infections in immunocompetent and immunocompromised patients.

Authors:  Thomas Lion
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 26.132

4.  Molecular evolution of human species D adenoviruses.

Authors:  Christopher M Robinson; Donald Seto; Morris S Jones; David W Dyer; James Chodosh
Journal:  Infect Genet Evol       Date:  2011-05-05       Impact factor: 3.342

5.  Outbreak of acute respiratory infection among infants in Lisbon, Portugal, caused by human adenovirus serotype 3 and a new 7/3 recombinant strain.

Authors:  Helena Rebelo-de-Andrade; Cristiana Pereira; Marta Gíria; Ema Prudêncio; Maria João Brito; Etelvina Calé; Nuno Taveira
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2010-02-10       Impact factor: 5.948

6.  Computational analysis of human adenovirus serotype 18.

Authors:  Michael P Walsh; Jason Seto; Damaris Tirado; James Chodosh; David Schnurr; Donald Seto; Morris S Jones
Journal:  Virology       Date:  2010-06-09       Impact factor: 3.616

7.  Quantitative real-time PCR assay panel for detection and type-specific identification of epidemic respiratory human adenoviruses.

Authors:  Xiaoyan Lu; Elizabeth Trujillo-Lopez; Lisa Lott; Dean D Erdman
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2013-01-16       Impact factor: 5.948

8.  Identification of adenoviruses in specimens from high-risk pediatric stem cell transplant recipients and controls.

Authors:  Xiaotian Zheng; Xiaoyan Lu; Dean D Erdman; Evan J Anderson; Judith A Guzman-Cottrill; Morris Kletzel; Ben Z Katz
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2007-11-07       Impact factor: 5.948

9.  Molecular typing of clinical adenovirus specimens by an algorithm which permits detection of adenovirus coinfections and intermediate adenovirus strains.

Authors:  Troy McCarthy; Mark G Lebeck; Ana W Capuano; David P Schnurr; Gregory C Gray
Journal:  J Clin Virol       Date:  2009-07-04       Impact factor: 3.168

10.  Genotype prevalence and risk factors for severe clinical adenovirus infection, United States 2004-2006.

Authors:  Gregory C Gray; Troy McCarthy; Mark G Lebeck; David P Schnurr; Kevin L Russell; Adriana E Kajon; Marie L Landry; Diane S Leland; Gregory A Storch; Christine C Ginocchio; Christine C Robinson; Gail J Demmler; Michael A Saubolle; Sue C Kehl; Rangaraj Selvarangan; Melissa B Miller; James D Chappell; Danielle M Zerr; Deanna L Kiska; Diane C Halstead; Ana W Capuano; Sharon F Setterquist; Margaret L Chorazy; Jeffrey D Dawson; Dean D Erdman
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2007-09-27       Impact factor: 9.079

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