| Literature DB >> 21251997 |
Cécile Henquell1, Julien Guglielmini, Jannick Verbeeck, Antoine Mahul, Vincent Thibault, Pascal Lebray, Syria Laperche, Pascale Trimoulet, Juliette Foucher, Hélène Le Guillou-Guillemette, Isabelle Fouchard-Hubert, Florence Legrand-Abravanel, Sophie Métivier, Catherine Gaudy, Louis D'Alteroche, Arielle R Rosenberg, Philippe Podevin, Jean-Christophe Plantier, Ghassan Riachi, Hénia Saoudin, Henri Coppere, Elisabeth André, Jérôme Gournay, Cyrille Feray, Sophie Vallet, Jean-Baptiste Nousbaum, Yazid Baazia, Dominique Roulot, Sophie Alain, Véronique Loustaud-Ratti, Evelyne Schvoerer, François Habersetzer, Rafael Juan Pérez-Serra, Samir Gourari, Audrey Mirand, Hélène Odent-Malaure, Olivier Garraud, Jacques Izopet, Gilles Bommelaer, Hélène Peigue-Lafeuille, Marc van Ranst, Armand Abergel, Jean-Luc Bailly.
Abstract
The epidemic history of HCV genotype 5a is poorly documented in France, where its prevalence is very low, except in a small central area, where it accounts for 14.2% of chronic hepatitis C cases. A Bayesian coalescent phylogenetic investigation based on the E1 envelope gene and a non-structural genomic segment (NS3/4) was carried out to trace the origin of this epidemic using a large sample of genotype 5a isolates collected throughout France. The dates of documented transmissions by blood transfusion were used to calibrate five nodes in the phylogeny. The results of the E1 gene analysis showed that the best-fitting population dynamic model was the expansion growth model under a relaxed molecular clock. The rate of nucleotide substitutions and time to the most recent common ancestors (tMRCA) of genotype 5a isolates were estimated. The divergence of all the French HCV genotype 5a strains included in this study was dated to 1939 [95% HPD: 1921-1956], and the tMRCA of isolates from central France was dated to 1954 [1942-1967], which is in agreement with epidemiological data. NS3/4 analysis provided similar estimates with strongly overlapping HPD values. Phylodynamic analyses give a plausible reconstruction of the evolutionary history of HCV genotype 5a in France, suggesting the concomitant roles of transfusion, iatrogenic route and intra-familial transmission in viral diffusion.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21251997 DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2010.12.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Genet Evol ISSN: 1567-1348 Impact factor: 3.342