| Literature DB >> 22937119 |
Naiying Mao1, Yixin Ji, Zhengde Xie, Huanhuan Wang, Huiling Wang, Junjing An, Xinxin Zhang, Yan Zhang, Zhen Zhu, Aili Cui, Songtao Xu, Kunling Shen, Chunyan Liu, Weizhong Yang, Wenbo Xu.
Abstract
The relevance of human parainfluenza viruses (HPIVs) to the epidemiology of acute respiratory infections (ARI) in China is unclear. From May 2008 to September 2010, 443 nasopharyngeal aspirates (NPAs) from hospitalized pediatric patients (age from 1 to 93 months) in Beijing were collected and screened for HPIVs and other common respiratory viruses by real-time RT-PCR. Sixty-two of 443 samples were positive for HPIVs with 4 positive for HPIV-2 and 58 positive for HPIV-3, indicating that HPIV-3 was the predominant virus present during the study period. A phylogenetic tree based on all the available HN (hemagglutinin-neuraminidase) sequences of HPIV-3 indicated that three distinct clusters (A,B, and C) were circulating with some temporal and regional clustering. Cluster C was further divided into sub-clusters, C1, C2, C3 and C4. HPIV-3 from Beijing isolates belonged to sub-cluster C3, and were grouped with the isolates from two Provinces of China and the neighboring country of Japan. Genetic analysis based on entire HN gene revealed that the HPIV-3 isolates from Beijing were highly similar with 97.2%-100% identity at the nucleotide level and these could be divided into two closely related lineages, C3a and C3b. These findings suggested that there was co-circulation of multiple lineages of HPIV-3 in the Beijing region during the study period. This is the first study to describe the epidemiology and molecular characterization of HPIVs in China.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22937119 PMCID: PMC3429441 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Co-infections in HPIV-3 positive Samples.
| No. of Cases | Respiratory viruses detected | Diagnosis |
| 15 | HPIV-3, HCoV | 15 pneumonia |
| 5 | HPIV-3, HRV | 5 pneumonia |
| 3 | HPIV-3, RSV | 2 pneumonia, 1 bronchitis |
| 3 | HPIV-3, HMPV | 2 pneumonia, 1 bronchitis |
| 2 | HPIV-3, ADV | 2 pneumonia |
| 6 | HPIV-3, HCoV, HRV | 5 pneumonia, 1 bronchitis |
| 1 | HPIV-3, HCoV, HMPV | 1 pneumonia |
| 1 | HPIV-3, HCoV, ADV | 1 pneumonia |
| 1 | HPIV-3, HCoV, RSV | 1 pneumonia |
| 2 | HPIV-3, HMPV, RSV | 1 pneumonia, 1 bronchiolitis |
| 1 | HPIV-3, ADV, RSV | 1 pneumonia, |
| 1 | HPIV-3, RSV, HRV | 1 pneumonia |
| 1 | HPIV-3, ADV, HRV | 1 pneumonia, |
| 1 | HPIV-3, HCoV, HMPV, HRV | 1 pneumonia, |
| 1 | HPIV-3,ADV, RSV, HRV, HMPV | 1 pneumonia, |
Figure 1Monthly distribution of the 58 hospitalized children with HPIV-3 infection.
Figure 2Genetic distances among HPIV-3 isolates.
Nucleotide sequence diversity was calculated using Kimura 2-parameter method. The threshold value of 0.045 that divided comparisons between members of the same (phylogenetically defined) cluster and between different clusters is shown as a dashed line.
Figure 3Phylogenetic analysis based on complete HN sequences of Beijing strains and other strains of HPIV-3 from different geographic origins.
The neighbor-joining method was used to construct the trees. Numbers at the nodes represent the percentage of 1,000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates.▴2008• 2009.
Human parainfluenza viruses real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) panel primer and probe sequences.
| Assay, primer/probe | Final concentrationnmol/L | Gene target | Sequence(5′→3′) |
| HPIV-1 | HN protein | ||
| Forward | 900 |
| |
| Reverse | 900 | GTAGCCTMCCTTCGGCACCTAA | |
| Probe | 200 |
| |
| HPIV-2 | HN protein | ||
| Forward | 900 |
| |
| Reverse | 900 |
| |
| Probe | 200 |
| |
| HPIV-3 | HN protein | ||
| Forward | 600 |
| |
| Reverse | 600 |
| |
| Probe | 340 |
|
Primer and probe sequences for HPIV-1 and HPIV-2 are from F. Watzinger et al. [46].
Primer and probe sequences for HPIV-3 are fromKate E. Templeton et al. [47].
Labeled at the 5′ end with FAM and terminally quenched at the 3′ end with Black Hole Quencher-1.