Hand-foot-mouth disease pathogen separation and EV71 VP1 gene analysis in Sanmenxia City, Henan Province, China.
- Author:
Shu-xing WU
;
Jing-fu WU
;
Jie YANG
;
Hai-yan WEI
;
Yu-ling XU
;
Xue-yong HUANG
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Child;
Child, Preschool;
China;
epidemiology;
Cities;
epidemiology;
Enterovirus A, Human;
classification;
genetics;
isolation & purification;
Female;
Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease;
epidemiology;
virology;
Humans;
Infant;
Male;
Phylogeny;
Viral Proteins;
genetics
- From:
Chinese Journal of Virology
2014;30(6):630-635
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
The aim of this study was to understand the enterovirus types and biological features of pediatric cases of HFMD in Sanmenxia City during 2011, and compare the latter to a cohort of healthy children. Stool samples of 55 cases of HFMD and 60 healthy children were collected for the isolation and identification of enteroviruses using RNA extraction and real-time RT-PCR assays. EV71 and CA16 were identified by nucleotide sequencing using virus-specific VP1 primers; for the other enteroviruses, 012/011 and 008/013 primers were used for amplification and sequencing. The results were analysed by sequence alignment with known sequences, and the characteristics of the EV71 VP1 gene were also analyzed. The detection rates for enteroviruses in cases of HFMD and healthy children were 52.73% (29/55) and 18.33% (11/60), respectively. Among these, there were 22 cases of EV71, four cases of CA16 and three cases of other enteroviruses in the cases with HFMD. Eleven healthy children had intestinal viruses, of which nine were Coxsackie B virus strains (81.82%, 9/11). Gene sequencing of the 19 EV71 strains illustrated that they were all subgenotype C4a, but the evolutionary tree showed an obvious clustering between cases from Lingbao City and Lushi County. This study demonstrates that the EV71 subgenotype C4a and CA16 strains were the most common cause of HFMD in Sanmenxia City in 2011, and that Coxsackie B strains were prevalent in healthy children. This finding may indicate that there is a widespread source of recessive infection in the community.