4.4 Article

Whole genome analysis of multiple rotavirus strains from a single stool specimen using sequence-independent amplification and 454® pyrosequencing reveals evidence of intergenotype genome segment recombination

Journal

INFECTION GENETICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages 2072-2082

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2011.09.023

Keywords

Rotavirus; Whole genome analysis; Genome recombination; Sequence-independent genome; amplification and 454 (R) pyrosequencing

Funding

  1. North-West University
  2. South African National Research Foundation [FA2005031700015, UID 63427]
  3. Poliomyelitis Research Foundation of South Africa [09/34]

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Infection of a single host cell with two or more different rotavirus strains creates conditions favourable for evolutionary mechanisms like reassortment and recombination that can generate novel strains. Despite numerous reports describing mixed rotavirus infections, whole genome characterisation of rotavirus strains in a mixed infection case has not been reported. Double-stranded RNA, exhibiting a long electropherotype pattern only, was extracted from a single human stool specimen (RVA/Human-wt/ZAF/2371WC/2008/G9P[8]). Both short and long electropherotype profiles were however detected in the sequence-independent amplified cDNA derived from the dsRNA, suggesting infection with more than one rotavirus strain. 454 (R) pyrosequencing of the amplified cDNA revealed co-infection of at least four strains. Both genotype 1 (Wa-like) and genotype 2 (DS-1-like) were assigned to the consensus sequences obtained from the nine genome segments encoding NSP1-NSP5, VP1-VP3 and VP6. Genotypes assigned to the genome segments encoding VP4 were P[4] (DS-1-like), P[6] (ST3-like) and P[8] (Wa-like) genotypes. Since four distinct genotypes [G2 (DS-1-like), G8, G9 (Wa-like) and G12] were assigned to the four consensus nucleotide sequences obtained for genome segment 9 (VP7), it was concluded that at least four distinct rotaviruses were present in the stool. Intergenotype genome recombination events were observed in genome segments encoding NSP2, NSP4 and VP6. The close similarities of some of the genome segments encoding NSP2, VP6 and VP7 to artiodactyl rotaviruses suggest that some of the infecting strains shared common ancestry with animal strains, or that interspecies transmission occurred previously. The sequence-independent genome amplification technology coupled with 454 (R) pyrosequencing used in this study enabled the characterisation of the whole genomes of multiple rotavirus strains in a single stool specimen that was previously assigned single genotypes, i.e. G9P[8], by sequence-dependent RT-PCR. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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