| Literature DB >> 30457521 |
Matthew A Voorhees, Susana L Padilla, Dulamjav Jamsransuren, Jeffrey W Koehler, Korey L Delp, Dolgorkhand Adiyadorj, Uyanga Baasandagwa, Battsetseg Jigjav, Scott P Olschner, Timothy D Minogue, Randal J Schoepp.
Abstract
During 2013-2014, we collected 1,926 serum samples from humans and 4,583 ticks (Hyalomma asiaticum or Dermacentor nuttalli) in select regions of Mongolia to determine the risk for Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) infection among humans in this country. Testing of human serum samples by ELISA demonstrated an overall CCHFV antibody prevalence of 1.4%; Bayankhongor Province had the highest prevalence, 2.63%. We pooled and analyzed tick specimens by real-time reverse transcription PCR; 1 CCHFV-positive H. asiaticum tick pool from Ömnögovi was identified. In phylogenetic analyses, the virus's partial small segment clustered with CCHFV isolates from Central Asia, and the complete medium segment grouped with CCHFV isolates from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. This study confirms CCHFV endemicity in Mongolia and provides information on risk for CCHFV infection. Further research is needed to better define the risk for CCHFV disease to improve risk mitigation, diagnostics, and surveillance.Entities:
Keywords: CCHF; CCHFV; Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever; Dermacentor nuttalli; Hyalomma asiaticum; M segment; Mongolia; S segment; serosurvey; tickborne disease; ticks; vector-borne infections; viruses; zoonoses
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30457521 PMCID: PMC6256378 DOI: 10.3201/eid2412.180175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Prevalence of CCHFV IgG among healthy persons as determined by ELISA, by province and district, Mongolia, 2013–2014*
| Province, district | No. positive/tested (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | 2014 | Total | |
| Khovd | 0/229 (0) | NA | 0/229 (0) |
| Üyench | 0/79 (0) | 0/79 (0) | |
| Bulgan | 0/72 (0) | 0/72 (0) | |
| Altai | 0/78 (0) |
| 0/78 (0) |
| Govi-Altai | 3/314 (0.96) | 1/21 (4.76) | 4/335 (1.19) |
| Bugat | 2/84 (2.38) | 2/84 (2.38) | |
| Altai | 1/84 (1.19) | 1/84 (1.19) | |
| Tsogt | 0/74 (0) | 0/74 (0) | |
| Erdene | 0/72 (0) | 0/72 (0) | |
| Taishir | 0/5 (0) | 0/5 (0) | |
| Yesönbulag |
| 1/16 (6.25) | 1/16 (6.25) |
| Bayankhongor | 4/146 (2.74) | 1/44 (2.27) | 5/190 (2.63) |
| Bayan-Öndör | 2/74 (2.70) | 0/1 (0) | 2/75 (2.67) |
| Shinejinst | 2/72 (2.78) | 2/72 (2.78) | |
| Jinst |
| 1/43 (2.33) | 1/43 (2.33) |
| Ömnögovi | 7/525 (1.33) | 1/40 (2.50) | 8/565 (1.42) |
| Gurvan-tes | 3/79 (3.80) | 0/10 (0) | 3/89 (3.37) |
| Noyon | 1/71 (1.41) | 1/10 (10.00) | 2/81 (2.47) |
| Bayandalai | 0/74 (0) | 0/10 (0) | 0/84 (0) |
| Khürmen | 1/75 (1.33) | 0/10 (0) | 1/85 (1.18) |
| Nomgon | 1/75 (1.33) | 1/75 (1.33) | |
| Bayan-Ovoo | 1/75 (1.33) | 1/75 (1.33) | |
| Khanbogd | 0/76 (0) |
| 0/76 (0) |
| Dornogovi | 6/410 (1.46) | 4/72 (5.56) | 10/482 (2.07) |
| Khatanbulag | 2/93 (2.15) | 2/17 (11.76) | 4/110 (3.63) |
| Khövsgöl | 3/91 (3.30) | 1/14 (7.14) | 4/105 (3.81) |
| Ulaanbadrakh | 0/60 (0) | 1/16 (6.25) | 1/76 (1.31) |
| Erdene | 0/80 (0) | 0/14 (0) | 0/94 (0) |
| Zamyn-Üüd | 1/86 (1.16) | 0/11 (0) | 1/97 (1.03) |
| Dundgovi | NA | 0/76 (0) | 0/76 (0) |
| Khuld | 0/33 (0) | 0/33 (0) | |
| Luus | 0/39 (0) | 0/39 (0) | |
| Saintsagaan |
| 0/4 (0) | 0/4 (0) |
| Dornod | NA | 0/49 (0) | 0/49 (0) |
| Bayan-Uul | 0/14 (0) | 0/14 (0) | |
| Bayandun | 0/15 (0) | 0/15 (0) | |
| Dashbalbar |
| 0/20 (0) | 0/20 (0) |
| Total | 20/1,624 (1.23) | 7/302 (2.32) | 27/1,926 (1.40) |
*CCHFV, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus; NA, none available.
Figure 1Geographic distribution of CCHFV-positive serum samples and tick and CCHFV-negative serum samples, Mongolia, 2013–2014. CCHFV, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus.
Primer sequences used for Nextera-based sequencing of S, M, and L segments of CCHFV from tick pool 159A, Mongolia, 2013–2014*
| Primer name | Sequence, 5′ → 3′† |
|---|---|
| CCHFV-M F-next | TCGTCGGCAGCGTCAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGtctcaaagaaatacttgc |
| CCHFV-M R-next | GTCTCGTGGGCTCGGAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGtctcaaagatatagtggc |
| CCHFV-S F-next | TCGTCGGCAGCGTCAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGtctcaagaaacacgtgccgc |
| CCHFV-S R-next | GTCTCGTGGGCTCGGAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGtctcaaagatatcgttgccgc |
| CCHF-L 1F-next | TCGTCGGCAGCGTCAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGtctcaaagatatcaatcccccc |
| CCHF-L 1R-next | GTCTCGTGGGCTCGGAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGttggcactatctttcatttga |
| CCHF-L 2F-next | TCGTCGGCAGCGTCAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGgaagagctatatgacataaggc |
| CCHF-L 2R-next | GTCTCGTGGGCTCGGAGATGTGTATAAGAGACAGtctcaaagaaatcgttccccccac |
*CCHF, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever; CCHFV, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus; L, large; M, medium; S, small. †The virus-specific sequences are lowercase, and the Nextera-specific sequences are capitalized.
CCHFV neutralization capacity of human serum samples with and without evidence of CCHFV IgG by ELISA, Mongolia, 2013–2014*
| Sample no. | ELISA OD | PRNT50 probit titer† | PRNT80 probit titer† |
|---|---|---|---|
| 376 | 0 | <10 | <10 |
| 674 | 0 | <10 | <10 |
| 272 | 0 | 89 | 27 |
| 822 | 0 | <10 | <10 |
| 408 | 0 | 19 | 11 |
| 868 | 0.01 | <10 | <10 |
| 85 | 0.02 | <10 | <10 |
| 867 | 0.21 | <10 | <10 |
| 862 | 0.31 | 26 | <10 |
| 297 | 0.38 | 29 | 10 |
| 41 | 0.40 | 33 | <10 |
| 667 | 0.42 | 15 | <10 |
| 823 | 0.43 | <10 | <10 |
| 115 | 0.64 | <10 | <10 |
| 101 | 0.87 | <10 | <10 |
| 131 | 0.97 | 10 | <10 |
| 870 | 1.18 | 127 | 45 |
| 81 | 1.18 | 40 | 20 |
| 97 | 1.28 | 20 | <10 |
*Samples positive for CCHFV IgG by ELISA were those with ODs >0.20. OD, optical density; PRNT50, plaque assay neutralization test with 50% of the plaque assay dose reduced; PRNT80, plaque assay neutralization test with 80% of the plaque assay dose reduced. †The titer reported is the inverse of the highest serum sample dilution that neutralized the appropriate percentage of virus.
Figure 2Phylogenetic characterization of partial small (S) segment sequence of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) isolate from tick pool 159A, Mongolia, 2013–2014. Near full–length CCHFV S segments from GenBank were aligned with the S segment sequence from tick pool 159A and a phylogenetic tree was generated. A) Genetic clusters are displayed as previously described (). B) Detailed view of phylogenetic tree of Asia 2 lineage. S segment of the CCHFV isolate from this study (tick 159A/Mongolia; bold) clusters in the Asia 2 lineage. Scale bars indicate nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 3Phylogenetic characterization of full-length medium (M) segment sequence of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) isolate from tick pool 159A, Mongolia, 2013–2014. Full-length and near full–length CCHFV M segments from GenBank were aligned with the M segment sequence of tick pool 159A and a phylogenetic tree was generated. A) M segment lineages weakly cluster by geographic location. B) Detailed view of phylogenetic tree cluster including the isolate from this study (tick 159A/Mongolia; bold). Tick 159A/Mongolia groups with CCHFV isolates from Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. Scale bars indicate nucleotide substitutions per site.