| Literature DB >> 30853512 |
Arunasingam Abayasingam1, Preston Leung2, Auda Eltahla1, Rowena A Bull1, Fabio Luciani1, Jason Grebely2, Gregory J Dore2, Tanya Applegate2, Kimberly Page3, Julie Bruneau4, Andrea L Cox5, Arthur Y Kim6, Janke Schinkel7, Naglaa H Shoukry4, Georg M Lauer6, Lisa Maher2, Margaret Hellard8, Maria Prins9, Andrew Lloyd2, Chaturaka Rodrigo10.
Abstract
Transfer of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection from a donor to a new recipient is associated with a bottleneck of genetic diversity in the transmitted viral variants. Existing data suggests that one, or very few, variants emerge from this bottleneck to establish the infection (transmitted founder [T/F] variants). In HCV, very few T/F variants have been characterized due to the challenges of obtaining early infection samples and of high throughput viral genome sequencing. This study used a large, acute HCV, deep-sequenced dataset from first viremia samples collected in nine prospective cohorts across four countries, to estimate the prevalence of single T/F viruses, and to identify host and virus-related factors associated with infections initiated by a single T/F variant. The short reads generated by Illumina sequencing were used to reconstruct viral haplotypes with two haplotype reconstruction algorithms. The haplotypes were examined for random mutations (Poisson distribution) and a star-like phylogeny to identify T/F viruses. The findings were cross-validated by haplotype reconstructions across three regions of the genome (Core-E2, NS3, NS5A) to minimize the possibility of spurious overestimation of single T/F variants. Of 190 acute infection samples examined, 54 were very early acute infections (HCV antibody negative, RNA positive), and single transmitted founders were identified in 14 (26%, 95% CI: 16-39%) after cross validation across multiple regions of the genome with two haplotype reconstruction algorithms. The presence of a single T/F virus was not associated with any host or virus-related factors, notably viral genotype or spontaneous clearance. In conclusion, approximately one in four new HCV infections originates from a single T/F virus. Resolution of genomic sequences of single T/F variants is the first step in exploring unique properties of these variants in the infection of host hepatocytes.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatitis C virus; InC3 study; Next generation sequencing; People who inject drugs; Transmitted-founder virus
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30853512 PMCID: PMC6487228 DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2019.02.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Genet Evol ISSN: 1567-1348 Impact factor: 3.342