| Literature DB >> 35839216 |
Kashif Iqbal Sahibzada1,2, Lilia Ganova-Raeva2, Zoya Dimitrova2, Sumathi Ramachandran2, Yulin Lin2, Garrett Longmire2, Leonard Arthur2, Guo-Liang Xia2, Yury Khudyakov2, Idrees Khan3, Saima Sadaf1.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections are public health problem across the globe, particularly in developing countries. Pakistan has the second highest prevalence of HCV infection worldwide. Limited data exist from Pakistan about persons who inject drugs (PWID) and are at significant risk of exposure to HCV infection and transmission. Serum specimens (n = 110) collected from PWID residing in four provinces were tested for molecular markers of HCV infection. Next generation sequencing (NGS) of the hypervariable region (HVR1) of HCV and Global Hepatitis Outbreak and Surveillance Technology (GHOST) were used to determine HCV genotype, genetic heterogeneity, and construct transmission networks. Among tested specimens, 47.3% were found anti-HCV positive and 34.6% were HCV RNA-positive and belonged to four genotypes, with 3a most prevalent followed by 1a, 1b and 4a. Variants sampled from five cases formed phylogenetic cluster and a transmission network. One case harbored infection with two different genotypes. High prevalence of infections and presence of various genotypes indicate frequent introduction and transmission of HCV among PWID in Pakistan. Identification of a transmission cluster across three provinces, involving 20% of all cases, suggests the existence of a countrywide transmission network among PWIDs. Understanding the structure of this network should assist in devising effective public health strategies to eliminate HCV infection in Pakistan.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35839216 PMCID: PMC9286280 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0270910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1Unrooted maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of HVR1 sequences 264 bp of length (NGS major haplotypes only) identified in this study (red) and shown in the context of GenBank reference sequences (grey) and other HVR1 sequences from Pakistan (blue). Clustered sequences are encircled. Arrows indicate HVR1 sequences of genotype 3a and 4a derived from PK-3 (mixed genotype infection).
Fig 2The GHOST HCV transmission network.
Each node represents a person. Link is drawn if the minimal hamming distance between sequences from two samples is smaller than the established genetic relatedness threshold [20]. Genotypes are color-coded. Color of the node core identifies members of the transmission cluster (yellow) and unlinked cases (blue).
Fig 3K-step network of the transmission cluster.
Color identifies haplotypes from each case. Only genotype 3a haplotypes from PK-3 are shown.
Intra-host HCV HVR1 heterogeneity.
| Per specimen | No. haplotypes | No. reads | Total diversity | Frequency of Major |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average | 4850 | 15259 | 0.015462 | 4059 |
| Min | 1443 | 5019 | 0.005123 | 445 |
| Max | 9926 | 19329 | 0.047517 | 9604 |
Properties of members of the transmission cluster.
| Case | Gender | Drug used | Age | Needle sharing | Frequency of drug use | Province | Total genetic diversity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Male | Cocaine | 22 | Yes | Daily | Punjab | 0.02883 |
| 7 | Male | Heroine | 17 | Yes | Daily | Sindh | 0.02139 |
| 8 | Male | Cocaine | 23 | Yes | Daily | KPK | 0.00654 |
| 27 | Male | Heroine | 27 | Yes | Daily | Punjab | 0.01429 |
| 41 | Male | Heroine | 45 | Yes | Daily | Punjab | 0.02215 |
Fig 4K-step networks of HCV HVR1 sequences from 3 samples.
Each node represents a unique haplotype, the diameter of the node is proportional to the haplotype frequency and links between adjacent nodes belong to the union of all minimum spanning trees (a) Low diversity intra-host HCV HVR1 population from PK-9 (0.00512), genotype 3a; (b) average diversity population from PK-20 (0.0142), genotype 1b; (c) high diversity population from PK-23 (0.0226), genotype 3a.
Fig 5PK-3 mixed infection with two HCV genotypes.