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Measles virus genetic evolution throughout an imported epidemic outbreak in a highly vaccinated population.

Authors :
Muñoz-Alía MÁ
Fernández-Muñoz R
Casasnovas JM
Porras-Mansilla R
Serrano-Pardo Á
Pagán I
Ordobás M
Ramírez R
Celma ML
Source :
Virus research [Virus Res] 2015 Jan 22; Vol. 196, pp. 122-7. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Nov 20.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Measles virus circulates endemically in African and Asian large urban populations, causing outbreaks worldwide in populations with up-to-95% immune protection. We studied the natural genetic variability of genotype B3.1 in a population with 95% vaccine coverage throughout an imported six month measles outbreak. From first pass viral isolates of 47 patients we performed direct sequencing of genomic cDNA. Whilst no variation from index case sequence occurred in the Nucleocapsid gene hyper-variable carboxy end, in the Hemagglutinin gene, main target for neutralizing antibodies, we observed gradual nucleotide divergence from index case along the outbreak (0% to 0.380%, average 0.138%) with the emergence of transient and persistent non-synonymous and synonymous mutations. Little or no variation was observed between the index and last outbreak cases in Phosphoprotein, Nucleocapsid, Matrix and Fusion genes. Most of the H non-synonymous mutations were mapped on the protein surface near antigenic and receptors binding sites. We estimated a MV-Hemagglutinin nucleotide substitution rate of 7.28 × 10-6 substitutions/site/day by a Bayesian phylogenetic analysis. The dN/dS analysis did not suggest significant immune or other selective pressures on the H gene during the outbreak. These results emphasize the usefulness of MV-H sequence analysis in measles epidemiological surveillance and elimination programs, and in detection of potentially emergence of measles virus neutralization-resistant mutants.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1872-7492
Volume :
196
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Virus research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25445338
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virusres.2014.11.015