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Evolution of hepatitis B virus surface gene and protein among Iranian chronic carriers from different provinces

Authors :
Fatemeh Ramezani
Seyed Moayed Alavian
Ahmadreza Sadeghi
Abolfazl Khedive
Leila Ghalichi
Mehdi Norouzi
Hadi Karimzadeh
Reza Malekzadeh
Ghodrat Montazeri
Azim Nejatizadeh
Masood Ziaee
Farshid Abedi
Behrooz Ataei
Majid Yaran
Babak Sayad
Mohamad Hosein Somi
Gholamreza Sarizadeh
Ismail Sanei-Moghaddam
Fariborz Mansour-Ghanaei
Houshang Rafatpanah
Hossein Keyvani
Ebrahim Kalantari
Mehdi Saberfiroozi
Reza Rezaee
Maryam Daram
Mostafa Mahabadi
Zahra Goodarzi
Vahdat Poortahmasebi
Babak Geravand
Azam Khamseh
Masoud Mahmoodi
Seyed Mohammad Jazayeri
Source :
Iranian Journal of Microbiology, Vol 7, Iss 4 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, 2015.

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Iranian chronic HBV carrier’s population has shown a unique pattern of genotype D distri- bution all around the country. The aim of this study was to explore more details of evolutionary history of carriers based on structural surface proteins from different provinces. Materials and Methods: Sera obtained from 360 isolates from 12 Different regions of country were used for amplificationand sequencing of surface proteins. A detailed mutational analysis was undertaken. Results: The total ratio for Missense/Silent nucleotide substitutions was 0.96. Sistan and Kermanshah showed the lowest rate of evolution between provinces (P = 0.055). On the other hand, Khorasan Razavi and Khoozestan contained the highest ratio (P = 0.055). The rest of regions were laid between these two extremes. Azarbayjan and Guilan showed the highest proportion of immune epitope distribution (91.3% and 96%, respectively). Conversely, Sistan and Tehran harbored the least percentage (66.6% and 68.8%, respectively). Kermanshah province contained only 5.2%, whereas Isfahan had 54.5% of B cell epitope distribution. In terms of T helper epitopes, all provinces showed a somehow homogeneity: 22.58% (Fars) to 46.6% (Khuz- estan). On the other hand, distribution of substitutions within the CTL epitopes showed a wide range of variation between 6.6% (Khuzestan) and 63% (Kermanshah). Conclusion: Further to low selection pressure found in Iranian population, the variations between different regions designate random genetic drift within the surface proteins. These finding would have some applications in terms of specific antiviral regimen, design of more efficient vaccine and public health issues.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20083289 and 20084447
Volume :
7
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Iranian Journal of Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3626f3ff191b4f3d84db8b579c6546cb
Document Type :
article