Full genomic analysis of a G8P[1] rotavirus strain isolated from an asymptomatic infant in Kenya provides evidence for an artiodactyl-to-human interspecies transmission event
✍ Scribed by Souvik Ghosh; Zipporah Gatheru; James Nyangao; Noriaki Adachi; Noriko Urushibara; Nobumichi Kobayashi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 467 KB
- Volume
- 83
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Group A rotavirus (GAR) G8P[1] strains, found sometimes in cattle, have been reported rarely from humans. Therefore, analysis of the full genomes of human G8P[1] strains are of significance in the context of studies on interspecies transmission of rotaviruses. However, to date, only partial‐length nucleotide sequences are available for the 11 genes of a single human G8P[1] strain, while the partial sequences of two other strains have been reported. The present study reports the first complete genome sequence of a human G8P[1] strain, B12, detected from an asymptomatic infant in Kenya in 1987. By nucleotide sequence identities and phylogenetic analyses, the full‐length nucleotide sequences of VP7‐VP4‐VP6‐VP1‐VP2‐VP3‐NSP1‐NSP2‐NSP3‐NSP4‐NSP5 genes of strain B12 were assigned to G8‐P[1]‐I2‐R2‐C2‐M2‐A3‐N2‐T6‐E2‐H3 genotypes, respectively. Each of the 11 genes of strain B12 appeared to be more related to cognate genes of artiodactyl (ruminant and/or camelid) and/or artiodactyl‐derived human GAR strains than those of most other rotaviruses. Strain B12 exhibited low levels of genetic relatedness to canonical human GAR strains, such as Wa and DS‐1, ruling out the possibility of its origin from reassortment events between artiodactyl‐like human and true human strains. These observations suggest that strain B12 might have been directly transmitted from artiodactyls to humans. Unhygienic conditions and close proximity of humans to livestock at the sampling site might have facilitated this rare event. This is the first report on a full genomic analysis of a rotavirus strain from Kenya. To our knowledge, strain B12 might be the oldest G8 strain characterized molecularly from the Africa continent. J. Med. Virol. 83:367–376, 2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.