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Newly emerged enterovirus-A71 C4 sublineage may be more virulent than B5 in the 2015–2016 hand-foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in northern Vietnam

Son T. Chu, Kyousuke Kobayashi, Xiuqiong Bi, Azumi Ishizaki, Tu Thanh Tran, Thuy Thi Bich Phung, Chung T. T. Pham, Lam Van Nguyen, Ta Anh Tuan, Dung Thi Khanh Khu, Masanobu Agoh, An N. Pham, Satoshi Koike, Hiroshi Ichimura

2020Scientific Reports21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Enterovirus-A71 (EV-A71) is a common cause of hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFMD) and, rarely, causes severe neurological disease. This study aimed to elucidate the epidemiological and genetic characteristics and virulence of EV-A71 strains isolated from children diagnosed with HFMD. Rectal and throat swabs were collected from 488 children with HFMD in Hanoi, Vietnam, in 2015-2016. From 391 EV-positive patients, 15 EVs, including coxsackievirus A6 (CV-A6; 47.1%) and EV-A71 (32.5%, n = 127), were identified. Of the 127 EV-A71 strains, 117 (92.1%) were the B5 subgenotype and 10 (7.9%) were the C4 subgenotype. A whole-genome analysis of EV-A71 strains showed that seven of the eight C4a strains isolated in 2016 formed a new lineage, including two possible recombinants between EV-A71 C4 and CV-A8. The proportion of inpatients among C4-infected children was higher than among B5-infected children (80.0% vs. 27.4%; P = 0.002). The virulence of EV-A71 strains was examined in human scavenger receptor class B2 (hSCARB2)-transgenic mice, and EV-A71 C4 strains exhibited higher mortality than B5 strains (80.0% vs. 30.0%, P = 0.0001). Thus, a new EV-A71 C4a-lineage, including two possible recombinants between EV-A71 C4 and CV-A8, appeared in 2016 in Vietnam. The EV-A71 C4 subgenotype may be more virulent than the B5 subgenotype.

Topics & Concepts

VirulenceFoot-and-mouth diseaseOutbreakCoxsackievirusEnterovirus 71BiologyHand-foot-and-mouth diseaseVirologyEnterovirusDiseaseVirusMedicineGeneticsGeneInternal medicineViral Infections and Immunology ResearchAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology