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Emergence of human-porcine reassortment G9P[19] porcine rotavirus A strain in Guangdong Province, China

Shicheng Luo, Xiuqiao Chen, Guangzhi Yan, Shengnan Chen, Jinghua Pan, Mengyi Zeng, Hui Han, Yajing Guo, Haoquan Zhang, Jiaming Li, Meilian Mo, Mingjie Liu, Liangzong Huang

2023Frontiers in Veterinary Science15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

is one of the important intestinal pathogens causing diarrhea in piglets and humans. A human-porcine reassortment rotavirus, GDJM1, was identified from outbreak of diarrhea in suckling piglets and it associated with 60.00% (324/540) morbidity and 20.99% (68/324) mortality in Guangdong Province of China in 2022. Thus, to further characterize the evolutionary diversity of GDJM1, all gene segments were analyzed. The genome constellation was G9-P[19]-I5-R1-C1-M1-A8-N1-T1-E1-H1. Nucleotide sequence identity and phylogenetic analyses showed that the VP6, VP7, NSP4 and NSP5 genes of GDJM1 were the most closely related to the respective genes of porcine strains, with the highest homology ranging from 95.65-98.55% identity. The remaining seven genes (VP1-VP4, NSP1-NSP3) were the most closely related to human strains, with the highest homology ranging from 91.83-96.69% similarity. Therefore, it is likely that GDJM1 emerged as the result of genetic reassortment between porcine and human rotaviruses. To our knowledge, this is the first report that a human-porcine reassortment G9P[19] RVA strain has been identified in mainland China, which providing important insights into evolutionary characterization of G9P[19] RVA strain, and reveals that the strain has a potential risk of cross-species transmission.

Topics & Concepts

ReassortmentBiologyRotavirusPhylogenetic treeVirologyGeneticsGeneHomology (biology)PhylogeneticsWhole genome sequencingDiarrheaStrain (injury)GenomeVirusInternal medicinePathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)AnatomyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DiseaseMedicineViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyAnimal Virus Infections StudiesViral Infections and Immunology Research