4.7 Article

Genetic Characterization of Chikungunya Virus Among Febrile Dengue Fever-Like Patients in Xishuangbanna, Southwestern Part of China

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.914289

Keywords

Chikungunya virus; dengue virus; co-infection; adaptive mutation; vector-borne diseases

Funding

  1. Yunnan Key RD project [202103AQ100001]
  2. Chinese Central Government for Basic Scientific Research Operations in Commonweal Research Institutes [2021-PT310-007]
  3. CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (CIFMS) [2021-I2M-1-043]
  4. Yunnan Provincial Key Laboratory of Vector-borne Diseases Control and Research [2015DG037]
  5. Innovation Team Project of Yunnan Science and Technology Department [202105AE160020]

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This study reports the co-infection of CHIKV during the DENV epidemic in Xishuangbanna, China in 2019. Molecular epidemiology revealed that the CHIKV identified in this study belongs to the Asian lineage, with lineage-specific mutations and some reported adaptive mutations, distinguishing it from the recently reported East/Central/South African CHIKV in Ruili.
Co-infection of chikungunya virus (CHIKV) has been recently reported during dengue fever epidemics. However, the infection of CHIKV is often neglected due to its misdiagnosis as dengue virus (DENV) infection. In the summer of 2019 when dengue fever was epidemic, we collected 697 serum samples from febrile dengue fever-like patients in Xishuangbanna, southwestern part of China. DENV RNA was detectable in 99.42% of these patients. Notably, 88 patients (12.62%) showed the presence of CHIKV RNA, among which 86 patients were co-infected with DENV and CHIKV. We sequenced and analyzed the full genome of CHIKV virus in four out of 88 samples (two CHIKV infected and two co-infected). The results suggested that the four strains were all Asian genotype and had the highest homology (99.4%) with the SZ1239 strain (accession number MG664851) isolated in 2012 and possibly introduced from Indonesia. Further comparison with the conserved sequences in the whole genome of 47 strains of CHIKV showed that there were 13 and 15 amino acid mutants in structural proteins and non-structural proteins, respectively. The previously reported adaptive mutations of E2-W64R, E2-I211T, E2-K233E, E1-A98T, and E1-K211E occurred in the four strains of this study. In conclusion, this study reports a co-infection of CHIKV during the DENV epidemic in the city Xishuangbanna, 2019. Molecular epidemiology revealed that CHIKV identified in this study was indigenous and belongs to Asian lineage with lineage-specific mutations and some reported adaptive mutations, which is distinct from the recently reported CHIKV (East/Central/South African) in Ruili, the city next to Xishuangbanna.

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