Molecular characterization of hepatitis A virus isolated from acute infections in Turkey

Hepatitis A virus is a global public health problem, especially in developing countries, and the most common cause of hepatitis in childhood. Hepatitis A virus is a single- stranded positive RNA virus subdivided to 6 genotypes (3 human,3 simian). The aim of this study was to determine the prevalent...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Turkish journal of gastroenterology 2012, Vol.23 (6), p.714-719
Hauptverfasser: Dınç, Bedia, Koyuncu, Duygu, Karatayli, Senem Ceren, Berk, Elife, Karatayli, Ersin, Parlak, Mehmet, Çelık, Inci, Akgüç, Miray, Sertöz, Rüçhan, Berktaş, Mustafa, Bozdayi, Gülendam, Bozdayi, A Mithat
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hepatitis A virus is a global public health problem, especially in developing countries, and the most common cause of hepatitis in childhood. Hepatitis A virus is a single- stranded positive RNA virus subdivided to 6 genotypes (3 human,3 simian). The aim of this study was to determine the prevalent genotype in Turkey using sera of acute hepatitis A virus-infected patients from different geographical regions of the country. Sera of 137 patients with acute hepatitis A virus from different geographical regions were collected for phylogenetic analysis. The VP1-2A region of the hepatitis A virus genome was amplified by real-time-polymerase chain reaction in 76 patients where possible. Amplified polymerase chain reaction fragments were sequenced, and phylogenetic analysis was done together with other reference hepatitis A virus sequences obtained from GenBank database. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of the VP1-2A junction of hepatitis A virus showed that the most prevalent genotype in Turkey is IB (100%). Comparison of Turkish isolates and reference sequences of genotype IB showed a similarity of 94.9%. The same comparison was done between Turkish isolates and reference hepatitis A virus genotype IB and HM175, and it was found that similarity between them ranged from 93.0-95.9%. When Turkish isolates were compared according to Mean Percentage Nucleotide Distance analysis, similarity ranged between 95.3%-100%. Phylogenetic analysis pointed out that all Turkish isolates belong to genotype IB. Sequence analysis is a useful tool in revealing hepatitis A outbreaks, and allows us to detect and distinguish the presence of epidemic and small outbreaks.
ISSN:1300-4948
2148-5607
DOI:10.4318/tjg.2012.0450