| Literature DB >> 30566466 |
Joseph Humphrey Kofi Bonney1, Takaya Hayashi1,2, Samuel Dadzie1, Esinam Agbosu1, Deborah Pratt1, Stephen Nyarko1, Franklin Asiedu-Bekoe3, Eiji Ido2, Badu Sarkodie4, Nobuo Ohta2, Shoji Yamaoka2.
Abstract
Dengue fever is known to be one of the most common arthropod-borne viral infectious diseases of public health importance. The disease is now endemic in more than 100 countries in Africa, the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific with an estimated two fifths of the world's population being at risk. The notable endemic viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs) found in West Africa, including yellow fever, Lassa fever, Rift Valley fever, dengue fever and until recently Ebola have been responsible for most outbreaks with fatal consequences. These VHFs usually produce unclear acute febrile illness, especially in the acute phase of infection. In this study we detected the presence of 2 different serotypes (DENV-2 and DENV-3) of Dengue virus in 4 sera of 150 patients clinically suspected of Ebola virus disease during the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa with the use of serological and molecular test assays. Sequence data was successfully generated for DENV-3 and phylogenetic analysis of the envelope gene showed that the DENV-3 sequences had close homology with DENV-3 sequences from Senegal and India. This study documents molecular evidence of an indigenous Dengue fever viral infection in Ghana and therefore necessitates the need to have an efficient surveillance system to rapidly detect and control the dissemination of the different serotypes in the population which has the potential to cause outbreaks of dengue hemorrhagic fevers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30566466 PMCID: PMC6300295 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Dengue virus primers and RT-PCR assays used.
| Primer Name | Reagents | Cycles | Sequences (5'-3') | Target gene | Genome position/ Amplicon Length | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DEN-1 Forward | AgPath-ID One-Step RT-PCR Reagents | 45 | Envelope | 8973 | [ | ||
| DEN-1 Reverse | 9084 | ||||||
| DEN-1 Probe | 8998 | ||||||
| DEN-2 Forward | AgPath-ID One-Step RT-PCR Reagents | 45 | Envelope | 1605 | [ | ||
| DEN-2 Reverse | 1583 | ||||||
| DEN-2 Probe | 1008 | ||||||
| DEN-3 Forward | AgPath-ID One-Step RT-PCR Reagents | 45 | Envelope | 740 | [ | ||
| DEN-3 Reverse | 813 | ||||||
| DEN-3 Probe | 762 | ||||||
| DEN-4 Forward | AgPath-IDOne-Step RT-PCR Reagents | 45 | Envelope | 904 | [ | ||
| DEN-4 Reverse | 992 | ||||||
| DEN-4 Probe | 960 | ||||||
| DUC | QIAGEN OneStep RT-PCR Kit | 45 | Envelope | 511 | [ | ||
| DUS | Envelope | ||||||
| NS5F1 | QIAGEN OneStep RT-PCR Kit | 45 | Non-structural 5 | 917 | [ | ||
| NS5F2 | |||||||
| FU1 | QIAGEN OneStep RT-PCR Kit | 45 | Non-structural 5 | 266 | [ | ||
| cFD2 | |||||||
| FU2 | QIAGEN OneStep RT-PCR Kit | 45 | Non-structural 5 | 845 | [ | ||
| cFD3 | |||||||
A list of reference strains of DENV from the GenBank with their accession numbers, year isolated/detected and the location.
| Strain | Serotype | Location | Year | GenBank accession no. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fig 1Map of Ghana showing place of origin of samples.
Map shows the different parts of the country where samples were collected. The symbol star shows where the four DENV positive samples were taken.
Summary of results of testing.
| Test Performed | Number tested | Number of Positives (%) |
|---|---|---|
| DENV IgG | 150 | 85 (57) |
| DENV IgM | 150 | 32 (21) |
| Both DENV IgM and IgG | 150 | 22 (15) |
| DENV NS1 Antigen | 150 | 4 |
| DENV rRT-PCR | 32 | 4 |
Fig 2NS1 antigen strips.
Immunochromatographic assay for DENV NS1Ag test for real time RT-PCR positive samples (29, 42, 50 and 73). Two samples (22 and 127) that were negative by real time RT-PCR were included for validation. a. Arrowhead: positive band; b. * indicates the four patient samples found to be positive.
Fig 3Gel electrophoresis pictures of four positive patient samples by conventional-type RT-PCR using primers indicated.
Gel images after amplification using the following primer set: a) FU1 and cFD2- expected size 266bp b) FU2 and cFD3 –expected size 845bp c) DUC and DUS–expected size 511bp d) NS5F1 and NS5R –expected size 917bp NC–Negative control PC–Positive control M–molecular ladder.
Fig 4Phylogenetic trees generated based on the non-structural protein and capsid.
Phylogenetic trees were drawn using the maximum likelihood method a. Using DUC/DUS sequences b. Using FU1/cFD2 sequences.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of dengue positive patients.
| Patient ID | Gender | Age (yrs) | Occupation | Nationality | Known Dengue Symptoms | Rare Dengue Symptoms | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29 | Male | 56 | Trader | Ghanaian | Fever, vomit, nausea and muscle/joint pains | None stated | Alive |
| 42 | Male | 30 | Farmer | Burkinabe | Fever, headache, intense fatigue, general weakness, muscle/joint pains, anorexia/loss of appetite, nose and gum bleeding | Coma, Unconsciousness | Alive |
| 50 | Female | 33 | Trader | Ghanaian | Fever, headache, blood in vomit, muscle/joint pains, abdominal pains, nose and gum bleeding | None stated | Alive |
| 73 | Female | 35 | Housewife | Ghanaian | Fever, vomiting, general weakness, conjunctivitis, headache, muscle/joint pains, nose and gum bleeding, injection site bleeding | Difficulty in breathing, confused and disoriented, seizures, collapse | Dead |