Relationships among porcine and human P[6] rotaviruses: evidence that the different human P[6] lineages have originated from multiple interspecies transmission events.
Vito Martella1
Krisztián Bányai
Max Ciarlet
Miren Iturriza-Gómara
Eleonora Lorusso
Simona De Grazia
Serenella Arista
Nicola Decaro
Gabriella Elia
Alessandra Cavalli
Marialaura Corrente
Antonio Lavazza
Rafael Baselga
Canio Buonavoglia
Affiliations1 institutions
Dipartimento di Sanità e Benessere Animale, Facoltà di Medicina Veterinaria di Bari, S.p. per Casamassima km 3, 70010 Valenzano, Bari, Italy.
Porcine rotavirus strains (PoRVs) bearing human-like VP4 P[6] gene alleles were identified. Genetic characterization with either PCR genotyping or sequence analysis allowed to determine the VP7 specificity of the PoRVs as G3, G4, G5 and G9, and the VP6 as genogroup I, that is predictive of a subgroup I specificity. Sequence analysis of the VP8* trypsin-cleavage product of VP4 allowed PoRVs to be characterized further into genetic lineages within the P[6] genotype. Unexpectedly, the strains displayed significantly higher similarity (up to 94.6% and 92.5% at aa and nt level, respectively) to human M37-like P[6] strains (lineage I), serologically classifiable as P2A, or to the atypical Hungarian P[6] human strains (HRVs), designated as lineage V (up to 97.0% aa and 96.1% nt), than to the porcine P[6] strain Gottfried, lineage II (<85.1% aa and 82.2 nt), which is serologically classified as P2B. Interestingly, no P[6] PoRV resembling the original prototype porcine strain, Gottfried, was detected, while Japanase P[6] PoRV clustered with the atypical Japanase G1 human strain AU19. By analysis of the 10th and 11th genome segments, all the strains revealed a NSP4B genogroup (Wa-like) and a NSP5/6 gene of porcine origin. These findings strongly suggest interspecies transmission of rotavirus strains and/or genes, and may indicate the occurrence of at least 3 separate rotavirus transmission events between pigs and humans, providing convincing evidence that evolution of human rotaviruses is tightly intermingled with the evolution of animal rotaviruses.
Phylogenetic and sequence analyses of VP4, NSP4B, and NSP5/6 genes showed that porcine and human P[6] rotavirus lineages are genetically interrelated, indicating multiple interspecies transmission events between pigs and humans.
Sequence analysis of the VP8* trypsin-cleavage product of VP4 allowed PoRVs to be characterized further into genetic lineages within the P[6] genotype. By analysis of the 10th and 11th genome segments, all the strains revealed a NSP4B genogroup (Wa-like) and a NSP5/6 gene of porcine origin. These findings strongly suggest interspecies transmission of rotavirus strains and/or genes.
Genes or proteins
VP4; VP8*; VP7; VP6; NSP4B; NSP5/6
Analysis methods
sequence analysis; phylogenetic analysis
Recombination Or Reassortment1 records
Recombination Or ReassortmentExtraction confidence 0.85
Key finding
Porcine rotavirus strains bearing human-like P[6] VP4 genes contained human Wa-like and porcine-origin genomic segments, consistent with reassortment between human and porcine rotaviruses during interspecies transmission.
By analysis of the 10th and 11th genome segments, all the strains revealed a NSP4B genogroup (Wa-like) and a NSP5/6 gene of porcine origin. These findings strongly suggest interspecies transmission of rotavirus strains and/or genes.