| Literature DB >> 23725047 |
De Wu1, Yonghui Zhang, Qiong Zhouhui, Jing Kou, Wenjia Liang, Huan Zhang, Corina Monagin, Qiaoli Zhang, Wenjie Li, Haojie Zhong, Jianfeng He, Hui Li, Songwu Cai, Changwen Ke, Jinyan Lin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: CHIKV is a mosquito-borne emerging pathogen that has a major health impact in humans in tropical zones around the globe. A new variant of the virus, E1-A226V caused a large outbreak in the Indian Ocean islands and India from 2004-2007. CHIKV outbreak was initially reported in Dongguan region of Guangdong in 2010 in China, another smaller CHIKV outbreak was found in Yangjiang region of Guangdong two weeks later. The viral agent causing the two outbreaks was inferred to be the new E1-A226V variant and Yangjiang CHIKV might be introduced from Dongguan. To confirm the hypothesis and determine the origin of CHIKV causing the outbreaks, we described Yangjiang outbreak in this study, and the molecular characterization of CHIKV from Yangjiang and Dongguang outbreaks were analyzed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23725047 PMCID: PMC3691762 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-10-174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1Locations of outbreaks of chikungunya fever in Dongguan and Yangjiang, Guangdong, China, October 2010.
Figure 2Number of reported cases of CHIK fever between September and October, 2010 in Yangjiang. Black bar sections indicate clinical cases and white bar sections cases confirmed by laboratory detection.
Characteristics of CHIKV cases and serum sample detection for CHIKV in Yangjiang of Guangdong, China, 2010
| D10131 | M/38 | 12 Oct | 18 Oct | + | + | - | + | + | - | -/ ND | -/- |
| D10132 | M/49 | 14 Oct | 18 Oct | + | + | - | + | + | - | -/ ND | +/+ |
| D10133 | M/46 | 16 Oct | 18 Oct | + | - | + | + | - | - | -/ ND | -/- |
| D10134 | F/42 | 17 Oct | 18 Oct | + | - | - | + | - | + | +/+ | -/- |
| D10135 | M/32 | 8 Oct | 18 Oct | + | - | - | - | + | - | -/ ND | -/- |
| D10136 | F/44 | 26 Sep | 18 Oct | + | + | - | + | + | - | -/ ND | +/+ |
| D10137 | M/48 | 20 Sep | 18 Oct | + | - | - | + | - | + | -/ ND | +/+ |
| D10139 | M/41 | 15 Oct | 19 Oct | + | - | - | + | - | + | +/+ | -/- |
| D10140 | F/35 | 13 Oct | 19 Oct | + | - | + | + | - | - | -/ ND | +/- |
| D10141 | M/38 | 24 Sep | 19 Oct | + | - | - | + | - | - | -/ ND | +/+ |
| D10142 | F/47 | 30 Sep | 19 Oct | + | + | - | + | + | + | -/ ND | +/- |
| D10143 | M/70 | 14 Oct | 19 Oct | - | - | - | + | - | - | +/- | +/- |
Abbreviation: F female; M male; IgM Immunoglobulin M; IgG Immunoglobulin G; “-”, Negtive; “+”, Positive; ND not done; RF Red face; Arth Arthralgia; Myal Myalgia; HC Headache; MR Maculopapular rash; VI virus isolation.
Figure 3Phylogenetic analysis based on the complete genome (11,700 nucleotides). The nucleotide sequences were analyzed using a MEGA 4.0 package. The phylogenetic tree was constructed by Neighbor-joining cluster analysis with the bootstrap option. The numbers at the branching points are bootstrap values estimated with 1,000 pseudo-replicate data. The last numbers of each strain name indicate the year of isolation. The locations are shown to the left of the strain name. GenBank Accession numbers are given in parentheses.
Amino acid differences among China (2008, 2010), Singapore (2008) and Thailand (2009) isolates
| nsP1 | 351 | 351 | Thr | Thr | Thr | Thr | Ala | Ala | Thr | Thr |
| nsP2 | 1134 | 599 | Thr | Thr | Thr | Thr | Thr | Thr | Ile | Ile |
| nsP3 | 1688 | 355 | Pro | Pro | Pro | Pro | Leu | Leu | Pro | Pro |
| 1714 | 381 | Ser | Ser | Ser | Ser | Ser | Ser | Tyr | Tyr | |
| C | 264 | 264 | Ala | Ala | Ala | Ala | Ala | Ala | Val | Val |
| E2 | 638 | 313 | His | His | His | His | Tyr | Tyr | His | His |
| E1 | 1035 | 226 | Val | Val | Val | Ala | Val | Val | Val | Val |
| 1059 | 250 | Ser | Ser | Ser | Ser | Pro | Pro | Ser | Ser |