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A complex hepatitis B virus (X/C) recombinant is common in Long An county, Guangxi and may have originated in southern China

Authors :
Stéphane Hué
Jin-Ye Yang
Tim J. Harrison
Qin-Yan Chen
Guo-Jian Li
Xue-Yan Wang
Kong-Xiong Fang
Caroline A. Sabin
Jian Huang
Zhong-Liao Fang
Source :
The Journal of General Virology
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Microbiology Society, 2010.

Abstract

Recently, a complex (X/C) hepatitis B virus (HBV) recombinant, first reported in 2000, was proposed as a new genotype; although this was refuted immediately because the strains differ by less than 8 % in nucleotide distance from genotype C. Over 13.5 % (38/281) of HBV isolates from the Long An cohort in China were not assigned to a specific genotype, using current genotyping tools to analyse surface ORF sequences, and these have about 98 % similarity to the X/C recombinants. To determine whether this close identity extends to the full-length sequences and to investigate the evolutionary history of the Long An X/C recombinants, 17 complete genome sequences were determined. They are highly similar (96-99 %) to the Vietnamese strains and, although some reach or exceed 8 % nucleotide sequence difference from all known genotypes, they cluster together in the same clade, separating in a phylogenetic tree from the genotype C branch. Analysis of recombination reveals that all but one of the Long An isolates resembles the Vietnamese isolates in that they result from apparent recombination between genotype C and a parent of unknown genotype (X), which shows similarity in part to genotype G. The exception, isolate QL523, has a greater proportion of genotype C parent. Phylogeographic analysis reveals that these recombinants probably arose in southern China and spread later to Vietnam and Laos.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221317
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of General Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....57ede4be16a7334d88592dae822b3938