Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 2002, p. 316-317, Vol. 40, No. 1
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.1.316-317.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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To better investigate the possible circulation of recombinant polioviruses among the hit population during the outbreak, as found by Divizia et al. (2) for environmental samples collected before the outbreak, a larger sequence analysis was carried out, which included sequencing of the 5' untranslated region (UTR) and the 3D coding regions of all 74 isolates of wild poliovirus type 1 and of the full VP1 sequences of 10 isolates representative of the outbreak. These new sequences were then compared with those of the poliovirus strains isolated in Pakistan in 1995, which were kindly provided by Olen Kew (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga.). The study was also precipitated by the need to gather as much information as possible from this important sample collection before elimination of wild polioviruses, as recommended by the World Health Organization for containment procedures (7).
As with the VP1-2A region and complete VP1 sequences, comparison of the 5' UTR sequences of all Albanian isolates with those of isolates found in Pakistan in 1995 and with those of environmental isolates of wild type 1 polioviruses revealed a 97 to 100% homology among these strains, confirming that the poliovirus involved in the outbreak was imported directly from Pakistan (Fig. 1). The 90% sequence homology in the 5' UTR reported for the environmental isolates (2) with respect to the poliovirus type 3 isolate gb/L76413/POL5-UTRN-50/URSS/87 and the poliovirus type 1 isolate gb/L76402/POL5UTRF-15/Hong Kong/81 was also shown by the strains circulating in Pakistan in 1995 and all strains isolated from the Albanian poliomyelitic patients. This evidence seems to exclude the possibility of two wild poliovirus serotypes circulating before the outbreak, suggested by Divizia and coworkers (2). Alignment studies performed with the BLAST software package should be carefully interpreted, because similar levels of homology and other BLAST parameters (such as the Expect value) were also found after alignment of the sequence of the Albanian isolates with those of poliovirus type 3 isolate USOL-D-BAC and other enterovirus strains (Coxsackie A21, Coxsackie A24, and several strains of Enterovirus 70).
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FIG. 1. Dendrogram of sequence relatedness in the 5' UTR of four representative poliovirus type 1 strains isolated in Albania, environmental strain Lana C (3), strains isolated in Pakistan in 1995, wild poliovirus type 1 strain Mahoney, and a vaccine reference strain (accession no. gi/61252/emb7V01149/POLIO1B and gi/61257/emb7V01150/POLIOS1, respectively). The Albanian virus strains were selected by place and time of isolation.
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The P1 and P2 coding regions and almost all of the 5' UTR and P3 coding regions of three representative virus strains were completely sequenced. These strains were selected because they had been isolated in different districts and at different times during the epidemic (strain 3788 was isolated in May in Durres, strain 3914 was isolated in August in Bulqize, and strain 4019 was isolated in Diber in October). The virus strains showed 97 to 100% homology between each other for all regions analyzed. Comparison of the 2C, 3A, 3B, and 3C region sequences with those of other circulating wild poliovirus strains was not possible because data were not available in accessible data banks.
It is worthy of note that although almost 700,000 doses of trivalent oral poliovirus vaccine were distributed between May and November, before and during the outbreak, no wild-vaccine recombinant strains were found among the 74 poliovirus strains isolated from poliomyelitic patients. This was despite the isolation of a recombinant strain (poliovirus type 2 vaccine-poliovirus type 1 wild strain) from an environmental sample collected before the outbreak (3). Even when poliovirus mixtures were contemporaneously isolated from stool samples, isolates showed genomes almost identical to those of either vaccine reference strains or wild type 1 poliovirus strains.
Although inter- and intratypic recombinations among Sabin strains in vaccinees (4) and among vaccine and wild-type virus strains (5) have been demonstrated to occur in vivo, this was not evidenced in our study. It is possible that the infectivity of recombinant strains found in the environment was much lower than that of the parental strains.
This study once again indicates that effective vaccination programs are essential to eliminate gaps in immunity and to achieve the goal of poliomyelitis global eradication (6). It also points to the need to coordinate environmental surveillance with acute flaccid paralysis surveillance (1) to have a better overview of the progress in polio eradication.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. Sequence data have been deposited in GenBank; the accession numbers are AY056620 to AY056693, AY056697, AY056699 to AY056703, and AY056707 to AY056777.
We thank Romina Tomasetto for editorial assistance.
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Jill Marturano Lucia Fiore* Laboratory of Virology Istituto Superiore di Sanità Viale Regina Elena 299 00161 Rome, Italy
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* Phone: (39-06) 4990-3256 Fax: (39-06) 4990-2082 E-mail: fiore{at}iss.it. |
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