Differential Infection Patterns and Recent Evolutionary Origins of Equine Hepaciviruses in Donkeys.
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Authors
Walter, StephanieRasche, Andrea
Moreira-Soto, Andrés
Pfaender, Stephanie
Bletsa, Magda
Corman, Victor Max
Aguilar-Setien, Alvaro
García-Lacy, Fernando
Hans, Aymeric
Todt, Daniel
Schuler, Gerhard
Shnaiderman-Torban, Anat
Steinman, Amir
Roncoroni, Cristina
Veneziano, Vincenzo
Rusenova, Nikolina
Sandev, Nikolay
Rusenov, Anton
Zapryanova, Dimitrinka
García-Bocanegra, Ignacio
Jores, Joerg
Carluccio, Augusto
Veronesi, Maria Cristina
Cavalleri, Jessika M V
Drosten, Christian
Lemey, Philippe
Steinmann, Eike
Drexler, Jan Felix
Issue Date
2017-01-01
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major human pathogen. Genetically related viruses in animals suggest a zoonotic origin of HCV. The closest relative of HCV is found in horses (termed equine hepacivirus [EqHV]). However, low EqHV genetic diversity implies relatively recent acquisition of EqHV by horses, making a derivation of HCV from EqHV unlikely. To unravel the EqHV evolutionary history within equid sister species, we analyzed 829 donkeys and 53 mules sampled in nine European, Asian, African, and American countries by molecular and serologic tools for EqHV infection. Antibodies were found in 278 animals (31.5%), and viral RNA was found in 3 animals (0.3%), all of which were simultaneously seropositive. A low RNA prevalence in spite of high seroprevalence suggests a predominance of acute infection, a possible difference from the mostly chronic hepacivirus infection pattern seen in horses and humans. Limitation of transmission due to short courses of infection may explain the existence of entirely seronegative groups of animals. Donkey and horse EqHV strains were paraphyletic and 97.5 to 98.2% identical in their translated polyprotein sequences, making virus/host cospeciation unlikely. Evolutionary reconstructions supported host switches of EqHV between horses and donkeys without the involvement of adaptive evolution. Global admixture of donkey and horse hepaciviruses was compatible with anthropogenic alterations of EqHV ecology. In summary, our findings do not support EqHV as the origin of the significantly more diversified HCV. Identification of a host system with predominantly acute hepacivirus infection may enable new insights into the chronic infection pattern associated with HCV.Citation
Differential Infection Patterns and Recent Evolutionary Origins of Equine Hepaciviruses in Donkeys. 2017, 91 (1) J. Virol.Affiliation
TwinCore, Zentrum für experimentelle und klinische Infektionsforschung GmbH, Feodor-Lynen-Str.7, 30625 Hannover, Germany.Journal
Journal of virologyPubMed ID
27795428Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1098-5514ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1128/JVI.01711-16
Scopus Count
The following license files are associated with this item:
- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
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