Author:
Chen Li-Na,Wang Si-Jie,Wang Song-Mei,Fu Xiao-Li,Zheng Wen-Jing,Hao Zhi-Yong,Zhou Hai-Song,Zhang Xin-Jiang,Zhao Yu-Liang,Qiu Chao,von Seidlein Lorenz,Qiu Tian-Yi,Wang Xuan-Yi
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Norovirus is a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis among children. Previous studies based on symptomatic infections indicated that mutations, rather than recombination drove the evolution of the norovirus ORF2. These characteristics were found in hospital-based symptomatic infections, whereas, asymptomatic infections are frequent and contribute significantly to transmission.
Methods
We conducted the first norovirus molecular epidemiology analysis covering both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections derived from a birth cohort study in the northern China.
Results
During the study, 14 symptomatic and 20 asymptomatic norovirus infections were detected in 32 infants. Out of the 14 strains that caused symptomatic infections, 12 strains were identified as GII.3[P12], and others were GII.4[P31]. Conversely, 17 asymptomatic infections were caused by GII.4[P31], two by GII.2[P16], and one by GII.4[P16]. Regardless of symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, the mutations were detected frequently in the ORF2 region, and almost all recombination were identified in the RdRp-ORF2 region. The majority of the mutations were located around the predefined epitope regions of P2 subdomain indicating a potential for immune evasion.
Conclusion
The role of symptomatic as well as asymptomatic infections in the evolution of norovirus needs to be evaluated continuously.
Funder
National Science and Technology Major Projects for Significant New Drug Development
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Virology
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献