Emergence of a Novel G4P[6] Porcine Rotavirus with Unique Sequence Duplication in NSP5 Gene in China

Author:

Zhou Xia1ORCID,Hou Xueyan12,Xiao Guifa1,Liu Bo1,Jia Handuo1,Wei Jie3ORCID,Mi Xiaoyun3,Guo Qingyong2,Wei Yurong3,Zhai Shao-Lun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Livestock Disease Prevention, Institute of Animal Health, Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Scientific Observation and Experiment Station of Veterinary Drugs and Diagnostic Techniques of Guangdong Province, Guangzhou 510640, China

2. College of Veterinary Medicine, Xinjiang Agricultural University, Urumqi 830052, China

3. Xinjiang Key Laboratory of Animal Infectious Diseases, Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Xinjiang Academy of Animal Sciences, Urumqi 830013, China

Abstract

Rotavirus is a major causative agent of diarrhoea in children, infants, and young animals around the world. The associated zoonotic risk necessitates the serious consideration of the complete genetic information of rotavirus. A segmented genome makes rotavirus prone to rearrangement and the formation of a new viral strain. Monitoring the molecular epidemiology of rotavirus is essential for its prevention and control. The quantitative RT-PCR targeting the NSP5 gene was used to detect rotavirus group A (RVA) in pig faecal samples, and two pairs of universal primers and protocols were used for amplifying the G and P genotype. The genotyping and phylogenetic analysis of 11 genes were performed by RT-PCR and a basic bioinformatics method. A unique G4P[6] rotavirus strain, designated S2CF (RVA/Pig-tc/CHN/S2CF/2023/G4P[6]), was identified in one faecal sample from a piglet with severe diarrhoea in Guangdong, China. Whole genome sequencing and analysis suggested that the 11 segments of the S2CF strain showed a unique Wa-like genotype constellation and a typical porcine RVA genomic configuration of G4-P[6]-I1-R1-C1-M1-A8-N1-T1-E1-H1. Notably, 4 of the 11 gene segments (VP4, VP6, VP2, and NSP5) clustered consistently with human-like RVAs, suggesting independent human-to-porcine interspecies transmission. Moreover, a unique 344-nt duplicated sequence was identified for the first time in the untranslated region of NSP5. This study further reveals the genetic diversity and potential inter-species transmission of porcine rotavirus.

Funder

Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences

Xinjiang Key Laboratory of Animal Infectious Diseases

National Key R&D Program of Guangzhou

Key Laboratory of Livestock Disease Prevention of the Guangdong Province

Department of Agriculture and Rural Affairs of the Guangdong Province

Publisher

MDPI AG

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