4.5 Article

Identification and a full genome analysis of novel camel hepatitis E virus strains obtained from Bactrian camels in Mongolia

Journal

VIRUS RESEARCH
Volume 299, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2021.198355

Keywords

Bactrian camel; Complete genome; Hepatitis E virus; Phylogenetic analysis

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Funding

  1. Research Program on Hepatitis from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development, AMED [JP20fk0210075]

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HEV strains belonging to genotype 8 (G8) were identified in Bactrian camels in China, showing high prevalence of HEV infection in Mongolian camels. The two HEV strains from Mongolian camels differed from Chinese camel HEV strains, potentially representing a novel subtype within G8.
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infects humans and a wide variety of other mammalian hosts. Recently, HEV strains belonging to genotype 8 (G8) within the Orthohepevirus A species of the Hepeviridae family, were identified in Bactrian camels (Camelus bactrianus) in China. The Bactrian camel (also known as the Mongolian camel) is native to the steppes of Central Asia. However, the HEV strains of Mongolian camels have not been examined. Among 200 serum samples from domestic Bactrian camels raised on 6 farms, in 6 soums in 3 provinces; 71 (35.5 %) were positive for anti-HEV IgG, with prevalence differing by farm (soum) (4.2-75.0 %); and 2 camels (1.0 %) that had been raised in Bogd, Bayankhongor Province, which had the highest seroprevalence among the six studied areas, were positive for HEV RNA. The two HEV strains (BcHEV-MNG140 and BcHEV-MNG146) obtained from the viremic camels in the present study shared 97.7 % nucleotide identity. They were closest to the reported G8 Chinese camel HEV strains but differed from them by 13.9-14.3 % over the entire genome, with a nucleotide difference of 24.0-26.5 % from the reported G1-G7 HEV strains. A phylogenetic tree indicated that the BcHEVMNG140 and BcHEV-MNG146 strains were located upstream of a clade consisting of the Chinese camel HEV strains and formed a cluster with them, with a bootstrap value of 100 %, suggesting that they may represent a novel subtype within G8. These results indicate a high prevalence of HEV infection in Mongolian camels and suggest that the variability of camel HEV genomes is markedly high.

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