| Literature DB >> 25906163 |
Jay Lin1, Marie Karlsson2, Ann-Sophie Olofson3, Sándor Belák1, Jonas Malmsten4, Anne-Marie Dalin5, Frederik Widén1, Heléne Norder2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infects a range of species, including humans, pigs, wild boars and deer. Zoonotic transmission may contribute to the high HEV seroprevalence in the human population of many countries. A novel divergent HEV from moose (Alces alces) in Sweden was recently identified by partial genome sequencing. Since only one strain was found, its classification within the HEV family, prevalence in moose and zoonotic potential was unclear. We therefore investigated samples from 231 moose in seven Swedish counties for HEV, and sequenced a near complete moose HEV genome. Phylogenetic analysis to classify this virus within the family Hepeviridae and to explore potential host specific determinants was performed. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25906163 PMCID: PMC4408071 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Map illustrating number of moose samples collected from Swedish counties in this study: The island of Öland, Småland, Västergötland, Södermanland, Västmanland Värmland, and Västerbotten.
Moose HEV PCR primers and probe used in the study.
| Primer name | Primer type | Sequence | |
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| HEVF8 | Forward |
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| HEVR8 | Forward |
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| HEVP8 | Forward |
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| Pool 1 | ISP-4232A | Forward |
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| Pool 1 | ISP-4232B | Forward |
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| Pool 1 | ISP-4232E | Forward |
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| Pool 2 | EAP-4576F | Reverse |
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| Pool 2 | EAP-4576E | Reverse |
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| Pool 1 | ISP-4232A | Forward |
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| Pool 1 | ISP-4232B | Forward |
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| Pool 1 | ISP-4232E | Forward |
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| Pool 3 | IAP-4561E | Reverse |
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| Pool 3 | IAP-4561F | Reverse |
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| Pool 3 | IAP-4561M | Reverse |
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The number (N = 231) and proportion of moose positive for HEV RNA and/or anti-HEV antibody detected in serum, feces or liver, arranged according to age class, gender and Swedish county.
| Variable | (N) | With anti-HEV (N) | (%, 95% Cl) | Reactive for HEV RNA (N) | (%, 95% Cl) | Total HEV markers | (%, 95% Cl) |
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| 0–1.5 | 107 | 12 | (11.2%; 6.0–19.2) | 18 | (16.8%, 10–25) | 26 (4) | (26%, 18–35.2) |
| 2–4.5 | 65 | 17 | (26.2%, 16.0–38.5) | 7 | (10.8%, 4.4–20.9) | 21 (3) | (32.3%, 21.2–45) |
| 5.5–15.5 | 35 | 6 | (17.4%, 6.6–33.7) | 5 | (14.3%, 4.8–30.3) | 8 (3) | (22.9%, 10.4–40.1) |
| Unknown | 24 | 8 | (33.3%, 16.4–55.3) | 4 | (16.7%, 4.7–37.4) | 12 (0) | (50%, 29.1–70.9) |
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| Male | 89 | 14 | (15.7%, 8.9–25) | 14 | (15.7%, 8.9–25) | 24 (4) | (27%, 18.1–37.2) |
| Female | 97 | 21 | (21.6%, 13.9–31.2) | 9 | (9.3%, 4.3–16.9) | 26 (4) | (26.8%, 18.3–36.8) |
| Unknown | 45 | 8 | (17.8%, 8–32) | 11 | (24.4%, 12.9–39.5) | 17 (2) | (37.8%, 23.8–53.5) |
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| Öland | 49 | 9 | (18.4%, 9.2–32.5) | 3 | (6.1%, 1.6–17.9) | 11 (1) | (22.4%, 12.2–37.0) |
| Småland | 51 | 9 | (17.6%, 8.9–31.4) | 4 | (7.8%, 2.5–19.7) | 10 (3) | (19.6%, 10.3–33.5) |
| Västergötland | 33 | 10 | (30.3%, 16.2–48.9) | 6 | (18.2%, 7.6–36.1) | 13 (3) | (39.4%, 23.4–57.8) |
| Södermanland | 77 | 13 | (16.9%, 9.6–27.5) | 19 | (24.7%, 15.9–36.0) | 29 (3) | (37.7%, 27.1–49.5) |
| Västermanland | 10 | 1 | (10%, 5,2–45.9) | 2 | (20.0%, 0.30–55.8) | 3 (0) | (30%, 8,1–64.6) |
| Värmland | 3 | 1 | (33.3%, 0.2–84.4) | 0 | (0, 0–0,7) | 1 (0) | (33.3%, 18–87.7) |
| Västerbotten | 8 | 0 | (0%, 0–40.2) | 0 | (0,0–40.2) | 0 (0) | (0,0–40.2) |
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* = 10 animals had both HEV-specific antibodies and HEV RNA detectable in their samples.
** = for 51 animals, both serum and fecal samples were available, 10 had detectable HEV RNA in feces, 6 of those had HEV RNA also in their serum samples.
Fig 2Phylogenetic relationship of moose HEV to other HEVs.
Mega 5.0 was used to generate phylogenetic trees with 1,000 bootstrap replicas and bootstrap values >70% are indicated. a) Maximum likelihood tree based on the 324nt of the partial HEV RNA dependent RNA polymerase gene, avian and rat HEV were used as outgroups. Samples pd12-1053S (serum) and pd12-1053F (feces) were from the same moose, while pd12-943S (serum) and pd12-943F (feces) were taken from another moose. b) Neighbor joining tree based on ~7 kb nucleotides of in frame HEV ORF1 concatenated with ORF2 (representing full genome analysis); trout HEV was used as outgroup. The length of the bar indicates genetic distance. ▼: Moose HEV
Nucleotide and amino acid sequence comparison of the moose HEV genome to other HEV genomes.
| HEV Variant | Full genome | ORF1 | Methyltransferase | Y-domain | PCP | HVR |
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| 38–4885 nt | 203–748 nt | 683–1312 nt | 1334–1681 nt | 1832–2215 nt | ||
| 1–1625 aa | 56–237 aa | 216–425 aa | 433–548 aa | 599–726 aa | ||
| % identity / Length (nt) | % identity nt / aa | % identity nt / aa | % identity nt / aa | % identity nt / aa | % identity nt / aa | |
| Gt1 (1) | 59.5/7199 | 56.7/58.3 | 61.9/65.4 | 67.4/77.0 | 36.4/29.3 | 34.4/23.9 |
| Gt2 (1) | 59.1/7180 | 55.8/58.1 | 60.4/67.0 | 68.8/76.5 | 35.6/31.1 | 30.5/21.5 |
| Gt3 (5) | 59.7/7237 | 56.2/57.7 | 60.9/66.2 | 66.3/75.6 | 36.6/29.8 | 36.1/23.7 |
| Rabbit (1) | 58.2/7318 | 54.4/56.1 | 59.0/65.4 | 65.8/73.7 | 36.6/31.1 | 32.1/20.8 |
| Gt4 (3) | 59.1/7252 | 55.6/57.4 | 60.0/64.6 | 64.5/74.0 | 37.6/31.5 | 34.2/22.1 |
| Gt5 (1) | 59.0/7267 | 55.7/47.6 | 60.8/59.3 | 65.9/75.6 | 36.0/30.5 | 33.9/24.6 |
| Gt6 (1) | 59.2/7267 | 55.8/47.4 | 60.8/59.3 | 68.1/76.5 | 35.6/30.5 | 35.4/22.3 |
| Rat (1) | 50.2/6965 | 49.2/48.6 | 56.8/59.3 | 56.7/58.0 | 29.0/21.4 | 26.4/20.8 |
| Ferret (1) | 50.1/6854 | 49.4/48.7 | 56.6/58.2 | 54.1/57.2 | 30.5/20.6 | 23.1/16.4 |
| Bat (1) | 45.8/6796 | 47.0/42.2 | 54.8/56.3 | 50.1/50.2 | 28.0/13.6 | 23.3/13.2 |
| Avian (1) | 45.1/6631 | 46.5/41.7 | 52.8/53.0 | 54.4/52.3 | 26.7/15.7 | 21.8/14.8 |
| Fish (1) | 35.1/7310 | 36.3/24.2 | 40.0/25.8 | 37.3/23.4 | 23.0/8.9 | 28.0/10.8 |
The moose HEV ORF1 with some internally selected domains: methyltransferase, Y-domain, PCP and HVR were compared to other HEVs. Subsequent analyses of the helicase and RdRp of ORF1, 1968 nt ORF2 and 348 nt ORF3 were presented in a previous study [28].
*Compared hepevirus sequences obtained from Genbank, gt1:AY204877; gt2:M74506; gt3:AB222182, AF082843, AB591734, EU360977 and FJ906895; gt4:AY594199, GU119961 and AB521806; gt5:AB573435; gt6:AB602441; Rat HEV: GU345042; Ferret HEV: JN998606; Bat HEV: JQ001749; Avian HEV: AM943646; Fish HEV: HQ731015.