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The evolution and transmission of epidemic GII.17 noroviruses

Authors :
Jiaqian Lao
Nuno R. Faria
Jing Lu
Changwen Ke
Oliver G. Pybus
Hui Li
Jinyan Lin
Jianpeng Xiao
Fen Yang
Huanying Zheng
Jayna Raghwani
Limei Sun
Tie Song
Tao Ni
Thomas A. Bowden
Lin Fang
Source :
Journal of Infectious Diseases. 214(4)

Abstract

Background In recent decades, the GII.4 norovirus genotype has predominated in epidemics worldwide and been associated with an increased rate of evolutionary change. In 2014, a novel GII.17 variant emerged and persisted, causing large outbreaks of gastroenteritis in China and sporadic infections globally. The origin, evolution, and transmission history of this new variant are largely unknown. Methods We generated 103 full capsid and 8 whole-genome sequences of GII.17 strains collected between August 2013 and November 2015 in Guangdong, China. Phylogenetic analyses were performed by integrating our data with those for all publically available GII.17 sequences. Results The novel emergent lineage GII.17_Kawasaki_2014 most likely originated from Africa around 2001 and evolved at a rate of 5.6 × 10(-3) substitutions/site/year. Within this lineage, a new variant containing several important amino acid changes emerged around August 2013 and caused extensive epidemics in 2014-2015. The phylodynamic and epidemic history of the GII.17_Kawasaki lineage shows similarities with the pattern observed for GII.4 norovirus evolution. Virus movements from Hong Kong to neighboring coastal cities were frequently observed. Conclusions Our results provide new insights into GII.17 norovirus evolution and transmission and highlight the potential for a rare norovirus genotype to rapidly replace existing strains and cause local epidemics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15376613 and 00221899
Volume :
214
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62d4bebf081efd4398c37aa95ce26c4a