| Literature DB >> 27044424 |
Oluyinka Oladele Opaleye1, Oluwatoyin Margaret Japhet2, Olubusuyi Moses Adewumi3, Ewean Chukwuma Omoruyi4, Olusola Anuoluwapo Akanbi1, Adeolu Sunday Oluremi1, Bo Wang5, Hoang van Tong6, Thirumalaisamy P Velavan6, C-Thomas Bock7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis D virus (HDV) infections are major public health problems in sub-Saharan Africa. Whereas it is known that HBV infection is endemic in Nigeria, there is only little data about HDV prevalence available. Here, we assessed the HDV seroprevalence and determined the HDV and HBV genotypes distribution among HBsAg positive individuals in Southwestern Nigeria.Entities:
Keywords: HBV infection; HDV genotype; Hepatitis D virus; Molecular epidemiology; Nigeria
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27044424 PMCID: PMC4820959 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-016-0514-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Patient data, detection of HBsAg and anti-HDAg in Nigerian patient samples
| Patient | Age (years) | Gender (f/m) | Region/City | HBsAg (+/-) | anti-HDV λ450_620nm | HDV-RNA (+/-) | HDV genotype |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14-366 | 45 | f | Osogbo | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-374 | n.d. | n.d. | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-375 | n.d. | n.d. | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-386 | 30 | m | Ibadan | + | 0.021 | - | |
| 14-387 | 34 | f | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-388 | 38 | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-389 | n.d. | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-392 | 18 | f | Ibadan | + | 0.884 | - | |
| 14-403 | 25 | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-406 | 24 | f | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-408 | 14 | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-415 | 24 | m | Ibadan | + | 1.016 | - | |
| 14-420 | 14 | m | Ibadan | + | 0.803 | - | |
| 14-425 | 33 | f | Ibadan | + | 0.701 | - | |
| 14-426 | 68 | f | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-432 | n.d. | m | Ibadan | + | 1.044 | - | |
| 14-444 | n.d. | f | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-445 | 34 | m | Ife | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-448 | 30 | m | Ife | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-460 | 46 | f | Ibadan | + | 0.277 | - | |
| 14-472 | 19 | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-495 | 49 | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-496 | 34 | m | Ibadan | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
| 14-509 | 32 | m | Ibadan | + | 1.128 | - | |
| 14-562 | n.d. | n.d. | Osogbo | + | n.d. | + | 1 |
Patient numbers are indicated as 14-XXX; the region/cities are located in south-western Nigeria within 200 km; OD (λ 450_620 nm); OD of >1.2 is not reactive, OD of 0.9-1.2 is borderline reactive, OD <0.9 is reactive. n.d. is not defined or data not available
Fig. 1Representative agarose gel electrophoreses of amplified HDV-products. a HDV specific nRT-PCRs showing results of the first PCR round (HDV-specific amplicon of 323 bp) and b nested PCR with an HDV-specific amplicon of 235 bp. Lanes 1-21 correspond to PCR results from serum samples. HDV-positive samples with correct size in (b) are denoted with the patient number, e.g., 14-445 (see (b) lane 13 and 21; upper lanes, and lane 4 and 10, lower lanes). PC is the HDV-positive control (acc. No. M21012, [27]); NC is the negative control. Lane M shows a 100 bp DNA ladder, base pairs (bp) of the marker are denoted at the left
Fig. 2a Representative HDV sequences of the HBsAg-positive patients aligned with the Nigerian HDV reference sequence JX888098. HDV sequences spanning the region from nt 887 to nt 1127 showing patient-specific HDV isolates. Notably, HDV reference sequences of pSVL-D3 (Acc. No. M21012; positive control of the nRT-PCR) has been included to show that there is no cross-contamination. b Phylogenetic analysis inferred from distance analysis (Kimura 2 parameters model) using neighbor-joining bootstrap 1000 replicate reconstruction from HDV-sequences (nt 888 to nt 1122) of the Nigerian HDV isolates (highlighted in boldface and designated as NGA and numbers, e.g NGA 14-375) and the corresponding region of reference sequences showing that the Nigerian HDV isolates clustered in the HDV genotype 1 branch. The Nigerian HDV sequences were compared to HDV reference sequences gathering the 8 HDV genotypes (HDV1 to HDV8) which are denoted at the right in brackets (accession number, genotype, and geographic area are denoted in the figure). The numbers at the nodes indicate bootstrapping values. The bar represents nucleotide substitutions per position. HDV sequences of the patient isolates are available at NCBI Genebank database (Acc. No. KU844264 to KU844277)