| Literature DB >> 28705178 |
Roberto Bruni1, Stefania Taffon2, Michele Equestre3, Eleonora Cella4, Alessandra Lo Presti4, Angela Costantino2, Paola Chionne2, Elisabetta Madonna2, Elitsa Golkocheva-Markova5, Diljana Bankova5, Massimo Ciccozzi4, Pavel Teoharov5, Anna Rita Ciccaglione2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection is endemic in Eastern European and Balkan region countries. In 2012, Bulgaria showed the highest rate (67.13 cases per 100,000) in Europe. Nevertheless, HAV genotypes and strains circulating in this country have never been described. The present study reports the molecular characterization of HAV from 105 patients from Bulgaria.Entities:
Keywords: Bulgaria; HAV; Hepatitis; Hepatitis a virus; Phylogenetic analysis; Sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28705178 PMCID: PMC5513050 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2596-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Distribution of molecularly characterized hepatitis A cases according to age categories and size of urban centers. The distribution in three age groups (Children: 0–12 years; Teens: >12 to 19 years; Adults: > 19 years) according to the size of urban centers (Large and medium centers: >30,000 inhabitants, range 44,000–1,203,000; Small centers: <30,000 inhabitants, range 132–27,000) is reported
Fig. 2Neighbour-Joining phylogenetic tree (Substitution model: T92 + G) of the 105 HAV isolates from Bulgaria. For each sequence, the town/village (Bis: Bistritsa; Bot: Botevgrad; DoB: Dolna Banja; Dog: Doganovo; ElP: Elin Pelin; Etr: Etropole; Gab: Gabrovo; Iht: Ihtiman; Kju: Kjustendil; Kob: Kostinbrod; Kon: Kostenets; MaR: Manaselska Reka; NoH: Novi Han; Nov: Novachene; Per: Pernik; Pir: Pirdop; Pra: Pravetz; Sam: Samokov; Shu: Shumen; Skr: Skravena; Sof: Sofia; Svo: Svoge; Var: Varna; Ver: Verinsko; refg: refugee, village information not available), the isolation year (2012, 2013, 2014) and the age group of the patient (A: Adult; t: teenager; c: child; n.k.: not known) are reported after the sequence ID. Reference strains with known genotype (IA, IB, IIA, IIB, IIIA, IIIB) were included in the analysis and are reported (in bold) by Accession number followed by the sub-genotype they belong to. Significant bootstrap values are reported. The asterisk shows a small outbreak of 9 cases from Ihtiman occurred between 25 June and 8 August 2012 and involving 6 children and 3 teenagers: the complete nucleotide identity of the isolates confirms a local small outbreak caused by the same strain
Fig. 3Distribution of strains according to the size of urban centers. a Distribution of the strains from the IA Major cluster, IA minor cluster and IB cluster according to the size of urban centers (see the legend of Fig. 1). The percent values are shown. b Detail of the number of cases and relative frequency of the strains from the IA Major cluster (strain 1, strain 2 and strains related to strain 1 and 2) in LMCs and SCs
Fig. 4Geographical localization of the characterized strains in Bulgarian towns/villages. The name of centers >30,000 inhabitants is reported in larger font size than the name of centers <30,000 inhabitants