| Literature DB >> 29471843 |
Ugne Spancerniene1, Juozas Grigas2, Jurate Buitkuviene3, Judita Zymantiene2, Vida Juozaitiene4, Milda Stankeviciute5, Dainius Razukevicius5, Dainius Zienius6, Arunas Stankevicius2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is one of the major causes of acute viral hepatitis worldwide. In Europe, food-borne zoonotic transmission of HEV genotype 3 has been associated with domestic pigs and wild boar. Controversial data are available on the circulation of the virus in animals that are used for human consumption, and to date, no gold standard has yet been defined for the diagnosis of HEV-associated hepatitis. To investigate the current HEV infection status in Lithuanian pigs and wild ungulates, the presence of viral RNA was analyzed by nested reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-nPCR) in randomly selected samples, and the viral RNA was subsequently genotyped.Entities:
Keywords: Moose; ORF2; Phylogenetic analysis; Pig; Red deer; Roe deer; Wild boar
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29471843 PMCID: PMC5824565 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-018-0367-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Primer sets used in this study
| Primer designation | Sequence (5ʹ → 3ʹ) | Step | Product length (bp) | Target region |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HEV-s | TCGCGCATCACMTTYTTCCARAA | RT-PCR | 469 | ORF1 |
| HEV-as | GCCATGTTCCAGACDGTRTTCCA | |||
| HEV-fn | TGTTGCCCTGTTTGGCCCCTGGTTTAG | Nested | 254 | |
| HEV-rn | CCAGGCTCACCRGARTGYTTCTTCCA | |||
| 3156F | AATTATGCYCAGTAYCGRGTTG | RT-PCR | 731 | ORF2 |
| 3157R | CCCTTRTCYTGCTGMGCATTCTC | |||
| 3158Fn | GTWATGCTYTGCATWCATGGCT | Nested | 348 | |
| 3159Rn | AGCCGACGAAATCAATTCTGTC |
Prevalence of HEV in domestic pigs and wild animal species using RT-nPCR assay
| Investigated host | ORF1 targeting primers | ORF2 targeting primers | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample type (number of HEV positive/tested samples (%)) | All types of samples (number of HEV positive/tested (%, 95% CI)) | Sample type (number of HEV positive/tested samples (%)) | All types of samples(number of HEV positive/tested (%, 95% CI)) | |||
| Serum | Liver | Serum | Liver | |||
| Domestic pigs ( | 155/470 (32.98) | – | 155/470 (32.98%, 28.88–37.35) | 106/470 (22.55) | – | 106/470 (22.55%, 19.01–26.55) |
| Wild boars ( | 62/235 (26.38) | 69/270 (25.56) | 131/505 (25.94%, 22.31–29.93) | 41/235 (17.44) | 45/270 (16.67) | 86/505 (17.03%, 14.00–20.55) |
| Roe deer ( | 10/45 (22.22) | 11/48 (22.92) | 21/93 (22.58%, 15.27–32.07) | 7/45 (15.56) | 5/48 (10.42) | 12/93 (12.90%, 7.54–21.21) |
| Red deer ( | 1/13 (7.69) | 0/2 (0) | 1/15 (6.67%, 1.19–29.82) | 0/13 (0) | 0/2 (0) | 0/15 (0%, 0.00–20.39) |
| Moose ( | 1/13 (7.69) | – | 1/13 (7.69%, 1.37–33.31) | 0/13 | – | 0/13 (0%, 0.00–22.81) |
Fig. 1Phylogenetic analysis of Lithuanian HEV ORF2 sequences. Clustal W algorithm was used for sequence alignment. Numbers adjacent to main branches indicate bootstrap values for different genetic subtypes within HEV genotype3. The reference sequences are marked as follows: GenBank Accession Number, host and name of sequence, country (up to three letter abbreviations), year, subtype. The analysis involved 80-nucleotide partial HEV ORF2 sequences. Only bootstrap values > 70% are indicated. The sequences determined in this study (Accession Numbers MG739304–MG739318) are indicated in bold and with arrows