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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2006, p. 1801-1809, Vol. 44, No. 5
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.44.5.1801-1809.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
G8 Rotavirus Strains Isolated in the Democratic Republic of Congo Belong to the DS-1-Like Genogroup
Jelle Matthijnssens,1
Mustafizur Rahman,1,2
Xuelei Yang,3
Thomas Delbeke,1
Ingrid Arijs,1
Jean-Pierre Kabue,4
Jean-Jacques Tamfum Muyembe,4 and
Marc Van Ranst1*
Laboratory of Clinical and Epidemiological Virology, Department of Microbiology
and Immunology, Rega Institute for Medical Research, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium,1
Laboratory of Virology, ICDDR, B, Centre for Health and Population Research, Dhaka,
Bangladesh,2
Xinjiang Pediatric Institute, People's Hospital, Urumqi, People's Republic of China,3
Institute for National Bio-Medical Research, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo4
Received 9 December 2005/
Returned for modification 24 January 2006/
Accepted 4 February 2006
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ABSTRACT
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Several G8P[6] and G8P[8] rotavirus strains were isolated from hospitalized patients in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2003. To investigate their overall genomic relatedness and to determine to which genogroup they belonged, the complete genomes of strains DRC88 (G8P[8]) and DRC86 (G8P[6]) were determined. Genomic comparison of these two African G8 strains revealed that 10 out of their 11 gene segments, except for VP4, were nearly identical (>98.9% identical at the nucleotide level), suggesting that this rare G8P[8] rotavirus strain originated recently from a reassortment between a common G8P[6] strain and a strain with a P[8] specificity. A very close evolutionary relationship between 9 out of the 11 gene segments of DRC88 and DRC86 and rotavirus strains belonging to the DS-1-like (G2P[4]) "genogroup" was found, and several possible reassortment events preceding the occurrence of G8P[8] and G8P[6] human rotaviruses were hypothesized. Since the genes of G2P[4] rotavirus strains are very well adapted to infect humans, the acquirement of a new VP7 (G8) gene, and especially the replacement of P[6] (believed to be of animal origin) by P[8] (most common in human rotaviruses), might make DRC88-like rotaviruses very well equipped to become a predominant human rotavirus strain and an important pathogen on the African continent and the rest of the world. These findings have important implications for rotavirus vaccine development and highlight that typing of new rotavirus strains by
merely sequencing their VP7 and VP4 genes provides us with only the tip of the iceberg regarding rotavirus diversity.
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INTRODUCTION
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Group A rotaviruses (RVs) are the most important cause of diarrheal
diseases and cause significant morbidity and mortality in young
children and animals worldwide, especially in developing countries
(34). RVs belong to the
family Reoviridae and posses a genome of 11 segments of
double-stranded RNA. A dual classification system based on the two
major outer capsid proteins defines several G and P genotypes of group
A RVs. To date, 15 G genotypes have been identified based on the
glycosylated VP7, and 26 P genotypes have been identified based on the
protease-sensitive VP4
(16,
37a,56,
58).
At least 11 G
types have been isolated from humans, but only G1, G2, G3, G4, and G9
are currently of epidemiological importance
(16,
55). G8 RVs are common in
cattle, but they also constitute a significant proportion of human RV
(HRV) strains in African countries
(11,
62). On single occasions,
G8 RVs have also been found in a pig, a horse, two guanacos, and a
macaque (24,
27,
28,
52). In humans, G8 RV
strains (57 M, 69 M, B37, and B38) were first isolated between 1978 and
1981 on the Indonesian islands Sumatra and Java
(5,
25). These four strains
possessed an unusual "supershort" electrophoretic
pattern. Since then, isolated human cases of G8 RV infection have been
found in Finland, Italy, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Australia, Japan,
and India with long and short electrophoretic patterns and with SG I
and SG II specificities
(8,
11,
21,
31,
33,
48,
60,
63). By far, the most G8
HRVs were found all over the African continent (Malawi, Nigeria, Egypt,
Kenya, South Africa, Guinea-Bissau, and Ghana), and in a few
epidemiological surveys, G8 was the predominant G genotype
(3,
7,
12,
13,
18,
19,
26,
44,
63). G8 HRVs have been
detected in combination with a large number of VP4 specificities: P[1],
P[2], P[4], P[6], P[8], P[10], and P[14]
(13,
19,
22,
31,
33,
53,
61). In addition to this
list, P[5] and P[11] (typical bovine P genotypes) have been found in
combination with G8 in cattle
(17,
20,
49).
RV diversity
is generated through the processes of genetic drift and genetic shift.
Genetic drift is due to the accumulation of point mutations due to the
error-prone nature of RNA-dependent RNA polymerases. Genetic shift
describes sudden changes in the rotavirus genome. The most important
source of these sudden changes is gene reassortments. After infection
of a host cell with two different RVs, theoretically, 211
progeny viruses with novel characteristics can arise
(57). Other less
frequently occurring examples of genetic shifts found in the literature
are partial gene duplications and crossover between rotavirus gene
segments belonging to different circulating strains
(15,
40,
51).
To determine
the overall genomic relatedness of different HRVs, RNA-RNA
hybridization assays have been used to define three
"genogroups" represented by the prototype HRV strains
Wa, DS-1, and AU-1 (43).
Several studies have used this genogrouping system to prove
intergenogroup reassortments between HRVs or to investigate
reassortments between RVs belonging to human and animal genogroups
(42). Although RNA-RNA
hybridization assays are an outstanding tool to quickly investigate the
genetic relatedness of RVs, faint hybridization bands and different
stringencies between assays can make results difficult to interpret and
compare (42). As a
complementary technique, complete or partial sequencing of the 11
genome segments of RVs can contribute to a better understanding of the
overall genomic and evolutionary relationships of RVs, as was
previously demonstrated in Finland by Maunula and Von Bonsdorff
(41).
In this
study, stool specimens collected from RV-infected patients during an
outbreak of acute diarrhea among young children under 5 years of age in
the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) were analyzed. The entire
genomes of a G8P[8] RV strain and a common G8P[6] RV strain isolated in
the same area were sequenced and compared. Their relationship to other
known RV strains circulating all over the world was also
investigated.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Rotavirus strains.
RV strains DRC88 and DRC86 were
collected from patients in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2003,
during an outbreak of acute diarrhea among young children under 5 years
of age, at the Kalembe-Lembe Pediatric hospital in Kinshasa, DRC. Fecal
samples containing these RV isolates were collected at the Institut
National de Recherche Bio-Medicale and were transported to the Rega
Institute, University of Leuven, Belgium, using chromatography paper
strips
(54).
RT-PCR.
Viral RNA was extracted using the
QIAamp Viral RNA mini kit (QIAGEN/Westburg, Leusden, The Netherlands)
according to the manufacturer's instructions. The extracted RNA was
denatured at 95°C for 3 min, and reverse transcription followed
by PCR (RT-PCR) was carried out using the QIAGEN OneStep RT-PCR kit
(QIAGEN/Westburg). Primer sequences used are available upon request.
RT-PCR was carried out with an initial reverse transcription step at
45°C for 30 min followed by a PCR activation step at
95°C for 15 min, 40 cycles of amplification, and a final
extension step for 10 min at 70°C in a GeneAmp PCR System 9700
thermal cycler (Applied Biosystems Group, Foster City, CA). For the
smaller gene segments encoding VP6, NSP1, NSP2, NSP3, NSP4, and NSP5,
the amplification cycle conditions were as follows: 45 s at
94°C, 45 s at 47°C, and 2.5 min at
70°C. For the larger segments encoding VP1, VP2, VP3, and VP4,
the cycle conditions were 45 s at 94°C, 45
s at 47°C, and 6 min at
70°C.
Nucleotide sequencing.
The PCR
amplicons were purified with the QIAquick PCR purification kit
(QIAGEN/Westburg) and sequenced using the dideoxy nucleotide chain
termination method with the ABI PRISM BigDye Terminator cycle
sequencing reaction kit (Applied Biosystems) on an ABI PRISM 3100
automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems). The sequencing was performed
with the same forward and reverse primers as those used for RT-PCR.
Primer-walking sequencing was performed to cover the complete genome on
both strands.
Determination of the 5'- and 3'-terminal sequences.
To obtain the complete nucleotide
sequences of strains DRC86 and DRC88, the 5'-and
3'-terminal sequences of the 11 gene segments were determined
using the single-primer amplification method
(36). Briefly, after RNA
extraction, a modified amino-linked oligonucleotide (TGP-Linker
[5'-PO4-TTCCTTATGCAGCTGATCACTCTGTGTCA-spacer-NH2-3'])
was ligated into the 3' end of both strands of the viral
double-stranded RNA with T4 RNA ligase (Promega, Leiden, The
Netherlands). RT-PCR with primers TGP-3Out
(5'-TGACACAGAGTGATCAGC-3')
(complementary to TGP-Linker) and appropriate gene-specific primers
(based on the known internal sequences of each segment) was carried
out. The following thermal cycling conditions were used: an initial
reverse transcription step at 45°C for 30 min, a PCR activation
step at 95°C for 15 min, a 45-min step during which the
temperature was gradually lowered from 83°C to 60°C (to
allow the newly transcribed cDNA strands to anneal), a 10-min step at
72°C (to allow the DNA polymerase to repair the partial
duplexes), 40 cycles of amplification (45 s at 94°C,
45 s at 45°C, and 1 min at 70°C), and a final
extension step for 10 min at 70°C. These amplified products
were purified and sequenced as described
above.
RNA and protein sequence analysis.
The chromatogram
sequencing files were analyzed using Chromas 2.23 (Technelysium,
Queensland, Australia), and contigs were generated using SeqMan II
(DNASTAR, Madison, WI). Nucleotide and protein sequence identity
searches were performed using the National Center for Biotechnology
Information (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD) BLAST (Basic
Local Alignment Search Tool) server of the GenBank database, release
143.0 (6).
Multiple-sequence alignments were calculated using ClustalX 1.81
(64). Sequences were
manually edited using the GeneDoc version 2.6.002 alignment editor
(45). Genetic distances
at the amino acid level were calculated using the Poisson correction
parameter with MEGA version 2.1 software
(35).
Phylogenetic analysis.
Phylogenetic and
molecular evolutionary analyses were conducted using MEGA version 2.1
software (35), based on
the deduced amino acid sequences of the different RV gene segments
available in GenBank. Dendrograms were constructed using the
neighbor-joining
method.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The complete nucleotide
sequence data of the 11 gene segments of strains DRC88 and DRC86 have
been deposited in GenBank under the accession numbers
DQ005104 to DQ005114 and
DQ005115 to
DQ005125.
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RESULTS
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The
complete nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of the 11 gene
segments of DRC88 (G8P[8]) and DRC86 (G8P[6]) were determined. Both
complete genomes contained 18,615 nucleotides and 5,799 deduced amino
acids. For each segment, the amounts of nucleotides and amino acids
were identical when DRC88 and DRC86 were compared. The exact number of
nucleotides (amino acids) were as follows: 3,302 (1,088) for VP1, 2,687
(880) for VP2, 2,591 (835) for VP3, 2,359 (775) for VP4, 1,356 (397)
for VP6, 1,062 (326) for VP7, 1,566 (493) for NSP1, 1,059 (317) for
NSP2, 1,066 (313) for NSP3, 751 (175) for NSP4, and 816 (200) for NSP5.
Comparison of the nucleotide (amino acid) sequences of the different
gene segments of DRC88 and DCR86 revealed very high similarities,
ranging from 98.9% to 99.9% (98.7% to 100%) except for gene 4, encoding
different VP4 proteins (P[6] and P[8], 70.2% [76.7%]). The overall
genomic identity was 96.5% (96.9%) (Table
1 and data not shown).
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TABLE 1. Percentages
of amino acid identity of the DRC88 gene segments with the (almost)
completely sequenced RV strains KU, DS-1, NR1, S2, IS2, Wa, TB-Chen,
SA11, B4106, 30/96, OSU, RF, Uk(tc), DRC86, I321, and
YMa
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G-typing analysis of the VP7 gene.
The VP7 genes of RV
strains DRC88 and DRC86 showed a 96.2 to 97.7% nucleotide sequence
identity and a 96.8 to 98.1% amino acid sequence identity with the
following G8 RV strains: MW333 and MW23 isolated in Malawi, R291
isolated in Brazil, and human and bovine strains HMG035, HMG89, and
NGRBg8 isolated in Nigeria
(1-3,
12). Phylogenetic
analysis of VP7 clustered DRC88 and DRC86 with these five African
strains and one Brazilian RV strain (Fig.
1A and
B). A very high degree of P-type diversity (P[1],
P[4], P[6], and P[8]) was noticed for these eight G8 RV strains (Fig.
1B).

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FIG. 1. (A)
Phylogenetic dendrogram based on the full-length amino acid sequences
of RV VP7 genes. Each G type is depicted as a triangle, and its size is
an indication of the number of sequences it represents. (B)
Detail of the phylogenetic relationship between G8 genotype RV strains.
(C) Phylogenetic dendrogram based on the full-length amino
acid sequences of the RV VP4 gene. (D) Detailed phylogenetic
relationship between DRC88 and DRC86 and other RV strains with the P[8]
and P[6] genotypes. (E) Second phylogenetic detail based on
the partial amino acid sequence (amino acids 12 to 286) of the
rotaviral VP4 gene. Bootstrap values (2,000 replicates) above 50 are
shown. For each strain, the following data are given: species of
origin/strain name/place of isolation/G or P type (Hu, human; Po,
porcine; Bo, bovine). RV strains isolated in Africa are in boldface
type.
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P-typing analysis of the VP4 gene.
A
phylogenetic tree that includes the complete VP4 amino acid sequences
of our DRC88 and DRC86 strains and all known P types (except for P[22],
P[23], and P[25], because no complete sequence data were available) was
constructed (Fig. 1C). A
detailed dendrogram of the P[8] and P[6] genotypes showing the
relationship of DRC88 and DRC86 with other complete VP4 amino acid
sequences is illustrated in Fig.
1D. For many RV strains,
only the partial VP4 gene sequences are known; therefore, a second
detailed dendrogram constructed with amino acids 12 to 286 is shown
(Fig. 1E). DRC86 clustered
closely with P[6] RV strains isolated in Malawi (G8P[6] strains), South
Africa (G9P[6] strains), and the United States (G9P[6] and G12P[6]
strains), with 95.1 to 96.7% identity (Fig.
1E). In contrast, DRC88
clustered very closely with G9P[8] RV strains isolated in Hungary and
Australia (98.6 to 98.9% identity) and G1P[8], G3P[8], and G9P[8] RV
strains isolated in Malawi, Taiwan, People's Republic of China, India,
and Denmark (97.8 to 98.6%) (Fig.
1E).
Genogrouping analysis of whole genomes.
Initial comparisons of the other nine
gene segments (encoding VP1, VP2, VP3, VP6, NSP1, NSP2, NSP3, NSP4, and
NSP5) of strains DRC88 and DRC86 with the corresponding genes of other
(nearly) completely sequenced RV strains found in GenBank revealed a
very high degree of similarity between DRC88 and DRC86 and RV strains
TB-Chen, DS-1, NR-1, S2, and IS2. Their VP4 and VP7 genes were only
distantly related. Table 1
shows the comparison of these nine gene segments of the DRC88 and DRC86
strains with several RV reference strains (Ku, Wa, TB-Chen, SA11,
B4106, 30/96, OSU, RF, UK, I321, and YM) and some of the partially
sequenced, very closely related strains (DS-1, NR1, S2, and IS2). Note
that all the strains that show a high degree of amino acid similarity
with our DRC88 and DRC86 strains belong to the DS-1-like (G2P[4])
genogroup (TB-Chen, DS-1, NR-1, S2, and IS2) (Table
1). Phylogenetic
dendrograms constructed with the complete amino acid sequences of these
gene segments are shown in Fig.
2
and 3.
The very close relationship between DRC88 and DRC86
and RV strains belonging to the DS-1-like genogroup is again reflected
in the dendrograms of the different segments. A visual summary of these
similarities is shown in Fig.
4.

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FIG. 2. Phylogenetic
dendrograms based on the full-length amino acid sequences of RV VP1,
VP2, VP3, and VP6 genes. Bootstrap values (2,000 replicates) above 50
are shown. Several clusters are replaced by a triangle for simplicity,
and the host species are provided (Av, avian; Hu, human; Bo, bovine;
Eq, equine; Po, porcine; Rh, rhesus; Si, simian; Mu, murine).
Phylogenetic clusters containing DRC88 and DRC86 are boxed, and for
each strain, the following data are given: species of origin/strain
name.
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FIG. 3. Phylogenetic
dendrograms based on the full-length amino acid sequences of RV NSP1,
NSP2, NSP3, NSP4, and NSP5 genes. Bootstrap values (2,000 replicates)
above 50 are shown. Several clusters are replaced by a triangle for
simplicity, and the host species are provided (Av, avian; Hu, human;
Bo, bovine; Eq, equine; Po, porcine; Rh, rhesus; Si, simian; Mu,
murine; Fe, feline; Ca, canine; La, lapine; Capr, caprine).
Phylogenetic clusters containing DRC88 and DRC86 are boxed, and for
each strain, the following data are given: species of origin/strain
name. For NSP4, the six established genogroups are also
shown.
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FIG. 4. Schematic
representation of the several segmented rotavirus genomes. Suggested RV
genomic reassortment events responsible for the occurrence of G2P[6],
G8P[4], G8P[6], and G8P[8] HRV strains are depicted. Segments belonging
to the DS-1-like genogroup based on sequence data, RNA-RNA
hybridizations, or electropherotype are depicted in red, segments
belonging to the Wa-like genogroup are shown in green, G8 is shown in
yellow, and P[6] is shown in blue.
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NSP5 gene analysis.
An unusually large NSP5 gene segment
(816 nucleotides) was detected in both DRC88 and DRC86. This larger
gene size was due to an AT-rich insertion into the 3' end of
the gene just behind the stop codon of the NSP5 protein. A very similar
gene structure has been described previously for RV strains isolated in
Argentina (v47, v51, v61, v115, v158, and v252), India (NR1), People's
Republic of China (TB-Chen), Japan (KUN), Australia (RV-5), and the
United States (DS-1) (23,
39,
47). Percentages of
nucleotide identity between the DRC88 and DRC86 NSP5 genes and the NSP5
gene of these strains ranged from 89.6% for the Argentinean,
Australian, and American strains to 97.1% for the Japanese, Chinese,
and Indian strains. These strains also clustered very closely together
in the NSP5 phylogenetic dendrograms shown in Fig.
3.
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DISCUSSION
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To
our knowledge, this is the first study to report full genome sequence
data for RVs from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Several G8P[6] and
G8P[8] HRV strains were detected by partial sequencing of their VP7 and
VP4 genes. In order to investigate their full genomic
relatedness and their relationship to other known RVs, the complete
genomes of DRC88 (G8P[8]) and DRC86 (G8P[6]) RV strains were
determined. A very high degree of sequence identity (>98.9% at
the nucleotide level and >98.7% at the amino acid level) was
found for 10 out of 11 gene segments. The VP4 genes of DRC88 (P[8]) and
DRC86 (P[6]) were only distantly related (70.2% at the nucleotide level
and 76.7% at the amino acid level). G8P[6] HRVs have recently emerged
in Africa and have been isolated in Malawi, South Africa, Ghana, and
Guinea-Bissau (9,
14,
18,
46,
63). On the other hand,
G8P[8] HRVs were mentioned only very briefly in epidemiological studies
in the United Kingdom, India, and Ghana between 1997 and 1999 and in
Guinea-Bissau in 2002 (9,
30,
33,
46). Our findings
suggests that a reassortment event has taken place recently between a
common African G8P[6] HRV strain (a recent ancestor of DRC86)
(7,
12,
13) and an RV strain with
P[8] specificity, resulting in a novel strain with the G8P[8] gene
combination. The VP4 phylogenetic tree (Fig.
1B) clustered DRC88 with
G9P[8] RV strains isolated in Australia and Hungary, suggesting that a
G9P[8] RV strain might have been the donor of the P[8] VP4 gene segment
of DRC88.
RNA-RNA hybridization assays are used to classify RVs
into genogroups based on their 11 genome segments. Most HRVs can be
assigned to one of two major genogroups, Wa or DS-1, or to one minor
genogroup, AU-1, on the basis of overall genomic RNA homology
(43). The same technique
has been applied to define genogroups for several animal RVs
(42). When the full amino
acid sequences of the DRC88 and DRC86 gene fragments encoding VP1, VP2,
VP3, VP6, NSP1, NSP2, NSP3, NSP4, and NSP5 are compared with those of
several other (almost) completely sequenced RV strains (Table
1), a very high degree of
amino acid identity among DRC88, DRC86, and DS-1-like RV strains
TB-Chen, DS-1, NR-1, S2, and IS2 was seen (Table
1). Therefore, DRC88 and
DRC86 are designated DS-1-like HRVs. The close relationship between the
G8P[8] and G8P[6] strains described in this study and the common G2P[4]
HRVs is also reflected in the different phylogenetic
dendrograms (Fig. 2 and
3). These
findings indicate that strains DRC88 (G8P[8]) and DRC86
(G8P[6]), which at first sight did not seem to be related to the G2P[4]
HRV strains at all, are actually very closely related to these
strains.
Figure 4
shows an example of possible events that could have led to the genetic
relationships between different HRVs and their gene segments and shows
how the G8P[6] and G8P[8] HRV strains might have occurred after several
gene reassortments between RVs belonging to different genogroups.
Wa-like and DS-1-like HRV strains are depicted in red and green,
respectively. (G8P[4] and G2P[6] HRV strains were designated DS-1 like
by RNA-RNA hybridization or electropherotype.) The G8 specificity
(shown in yellow) is believed to be of bovine origin, and it has been
suggested that G8 was introduced into HRV strains during several
separate reassortment events
(1,
10,
11,
31,
44,
63). The P[6] specificity
(shown in blue) is found in humans and pigs
(38) and is present in
more than a quarter of the HRV isolates found on the African continent
(59). DS-1-like HRV
isolates with G8P[4] specificity have been found on several occasions
on the African continent
(12,
13,
18,
44,
46,
63) and most likely
acquired the G8 specificity through a reassortment event between a
DS-1-like HRV and an RV with the G8 specificity (Fig.
4A). HRVs with DS-1-like
features and the G2P[6] specificity were detected in 1997 in Brazil and
South Africa (37,
50) and since then were
found on several occasions on the African continent (in Ghana, Nigeria,
Burkina Faso, and Guinea-Bissau)
(3,
7,
46,
50). The P[6] specificity
of these DS-1 like HRVs presumably arose after one or more reassortment
events involving DS-1-like HRVs and RVs with the P[6] specificity (Fig.
4B). Both these HRVs with
the G8P[4] and G2P[6] specificities are good candidates for being the
possible ancestors of the DS-1-like G8P[6] RVs found in this study and
in previous studies in Malawi, South Africa, Ghana, and Guinea-Bissau
(Fig. 4C)
(7,
9,
12-14,
18,
46,
63). This hypothesis is
strengthened by the observation that in several studies, G6P[8] HRVs
were shown to cocirculate with G8P[4] or G2P[6] HRV strains in the same
area (7,
12,
13,
18,
46). The G8P[8] (DRC88)
HRV described in this study has been shown to be highly similar in 10
out of the 11 gene segments compared to G8P[6] (DRC86), which was
isolated in the same area. These data suggest that the reassortment
that introduced the P[8] specificity (typical for Wa-like HRVs) into a
DS-1-like G8P[6] HRV background, generating a G8P[8] HRV (Fig.
4D), is most likely a very
recent event, different from the reassortment(s) that generated
previously described G8P[8] HRV strains.
After the isolation of
RV strains with an unusually large NSP5 gene, due to the insertion of a
long noncoding AT-rich region in their 3' end, in Asia (China,
Japan, India, and Australia), South America (Argentina), and North
America (United States)
(23,
39,
47), DRC88 and DRC86 are
the first such HRV strains isolated and sequenced on the African
continent. The first HRV strains with this rearranged NSP5 gene were
isolated in 1977 (4,
32), and they have been
isolated all over the world since then. Until now, they have always
shown the G2 specificity. This again strengthens the hypothesis that
DRC88 and DRC86 and G2P[4] RV strains belonging to the DS-1 genogroup
have a common ancestor.
The fact that RV genotypes, which are
normally uncommon in humans (G8 is of bovine origin, and P[6] is of
porcine origin), are frequently detected in developing countries is
most likely due to the close proximity in which humans and animals
often live in these regions. Several studies also have indicated that
mixed infections are more common in developing countries than in
developed countries (46,
59). These are two
important factors that favor the occurrence of unusual RV strains
through reassortment in developing countries.
Although RNA-RNA
hybridization is a fast way of comparing RV genomes and has been used
successfully for the characterization of many human and animal
(reassortant) RV strains, it is likely that with the increasing amounts
of full RV genomes available in databases and the increasing sequencing
possibilities in laboratories around the world, RNA-RNA hybridizations
will be gradually replaced by sequencing of RV genomes. As sequencing
will become the new standard technique, RV genome analyses, as
performed in this study, will be a powerful tool to investigate RVs and
their genetic and evolutionary relationships.
The replacement of
the P[6] specificity in DRC86 (G8P[6]), which is believed to be of
animal origin, with the P[8] specificity, very well adapted to infect
humans, might make this G8P[8] RV strain a successful human pathogen in
a way similar to that described for the G9P[8] HRV strains all over the
world (29,
55). This G8P[8]
combination should be taken into account by vaccine companies, although
the P[8] moiety included in several vaccines currently under
development might convey some level of protection against severe
gastroenteritis due to G8P[8] RV infection. The findings of this study
also indicate that the typing of new RV strains by sequencing of their
VP7 and VP4 genes alone will reveal only a small portion of the story.
The G and P types of an RV strain are only the tip of the iceberg
regarding RV diversity. Therefore, more attention should be paid to the
full genomes of circulating RVs, and RV surveillance should not be
restricted to humans.
.
.
.
.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We thank all the colleagues
of the Laboratory of Clinical and Epidemiological Virology, Department
of Microbiology and Immunology, Rega Institute for Medical Research,
University of Leuven, Belgium, for their helpful comments and
discussion.
J.M. was supported by the Institute for the Promotion
of Innovation through Science and Technology in Flanders (IWT
Vlaanderen).
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
* Corresponding
author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Clinical and Epidemiological Virology, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Rega Institute for
Medical Research, Minderbroedersstraat 10, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium. Phone: 32-16-347908. Fax: 32-16-347900. E-mail:
marc.vanranst{at}uz.kuleuven.ac.be. 
 |
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