| Literature DB >> 27808453 |
C Rodrigo1, A A Eltahla1, R A Bull1, F Luciani1, J Grebely2, G J Dore2, T Applegate2, K Page3, J Bruneau4, M D Morris5, A L Cox6, W Osburn6, A Y Kim7, N H Shoukry4, G M Lauer7, L Maher2, J Schinkel8,9, M Prins8,9, M Hellard10,11,12, A R Lloyd1.
Abstract
Cross-continental phylogenetic analysis is important to understand subtle molecular differences of currently circulating hepatitis C virus (HCV) subtypes. Existence of such differences can be crucial in pursuing a universal hepatitis C vaccine. We characterized molecular epidemiology of early HCV infections identified across nine cohorts [North America (n=4), Australia (n=4) and Europe (n=1)] in the International Collaborative of Incident HIV and Hepatitis C in Injecting Cohorts (InC3 ). One hundred and ninety-two full-length HCV genomes were amplified from plasma of incident infections and subjected to next generation sequencing to establish the largest cross-continental, full-length acute HCV genomic data set available to date. Genomes from the most common subtypes (1a: n=94, 2b: n=15 and 3a: n=68) were used in phylogenetic analysis. Using full genome trees, 78 sequences (44%) were found to lie within 29 phylogenetic clusters/pairs defined on the basis of molecular similarity of consensus sequences. Of these, 26 each had exclusively Australian or North American sequences indicating a strong geographical bias for molecular similarity. On further analysis of behavioural and demographic associations, binary logistic regression analysis showed that older age and non-Caucasian ethnicity were significantly associated with clustering. HCV probably evolves in micro-epidemics within geographically isolated communities.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatitis C virus; NGS; molecular epidemiology; people who inject drugs; phylogenetics
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27808453 PMCID: PMC5191976 DOI: 10.1111/jvh.12616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Viral Hepat ISSN: 1352-0504 Impact factor: 3.728