Genetic heterogeneity of hepatitis E virus recovered from Japanese patients with acute sporadic hepatitis
- PMID: 12001054
- DOI: 10.1086/340023
Genetic heterogeneity of hepatitis E virus recovered from Japanese patients with acute sporadic hepatitis
Abstract
The recent discovery of a presumably Japan-indigenous hepatitis E virus (HEV) strain (JRA1) spurred analysis of additional isolates from 7 cases of acute sporadic hepatitis E infection. Comparison of a 326-nucleotide region from open-reading frame 1 indicated that 1, 3, and 3 isolates segregated to genotypes I, III, and IV, respectively. Six patients had not traveled abroad recently. One patient had traveled to Hawaii 1 month before becoming ill, and the nucleotide sequence of the HEV isolate infecting her resembled those of US isolates (89%-91% nucleotide identity). However, the isolate was even more homologous to 2 other Japanese isolates (95%-97% nucleotide identity), suggesting that it is more likely a domestic, rather than an imported, strain. Three genotype IV isolates from Japan also had a higher homology to each other (100% amino acid identity) than to 2 Chinese isolates (97%-98% amino acid identity). These findings suggest that HEV strains of at least 3 different genotypes have already made inroads and are spreading in Japan.
Comment in
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Identification of indigenous hepatitis E virus from a Japanese patient who contracted sporadic acute hepatitis in 1982.J Infect Dis. 2002 Nov 15;186(10):1535-6; author reply 1536-7. doi: 10.1086/344349. J Infect Dis. 2002. PMID: 12404177 No abstract available.
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Severe hepatitis E virus infection after ingestion of uncooked liver from a wild boar.J Infect Dis. 2003 Sep 15;188(6):944. doi: 10.1086/378074. J Infect Dis. 2003. PMID: 12964128 No abstract available.
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