Literature detail

Hepatitis E virus infection in work horses in Egypt.

Magdi D Saad1 Hussein A Hussein Moustafa M Bashandy Hamdy H Kamel K C Earhart David J Fryauff Mary Younan Amira H Mohamed
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Virology Research Program, United States Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3, Cairo, Egypt. [email protected]
PMID 17046335 2007 Infect Genet Evol eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is an important cause of hepatitis among young Egyptian adults with high seroprevalence rates seen in both rural areas of the Nile Delta and in suburban Cairo. Because natural antibodies to HEV have been detected in animals and zoonotic transmission is postulated, we surveyed work horses in Cairo for evidence of HEV exposure and viremia. Sera from 200 Cairo work horses were tested by ELISA for the presence of IgG anti-HEV antibody revealed a seropositivity of 13%. Among 100 samples processed for detection of viral genome by means of nested polymerase chain reaction (N-PCR), 4% were positive and indicative of viremia. Viremic animals were less than 1 year old. Relative to PCR-negative horses, PCR-positive animals demonstrated significant elevation of AST (p=0.03). Phylogenetic analysis of a 253-bp fragment, in the ORF-1,2,3 overlap region of the HEV genome from the viremic animals showed that three of these viral strains to be identical, and closely related (97-100% nucleotide identity) to two human isolates from Egypt, and distant (78-96%) from 16 other HEV isolates from human and animals and shared 99.6% NI with the fourth strain. The consensus sequence of the four strains was origin obtained elsewhere. These data indicated that horses acquire HEV infection and suggest that cross-species transmission may occur. Whether horses play a role in the transmission of HEV needs further investigation.

Adult Animals Antibodies, Viral Egypt Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay Hepatitis E Hepatitis E virus Horse Diseases Horses Humans Molecular Sequence Data Phylogeny Polymerase Chain Reaction Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

HEV sequences from viremic horses in Egypt were nearly identical to human HEV isolates from the same region, based on phylogenetic analysis of an ORF-1,2,3 fragment.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Phylogenetic analysis of a 253-bp fragment, in the ORF-1,2,3 overlap region of the HEV genome from the viremic animals showed that three of these viral strains to be identical, and closely related (97-100% nucleotide identity) to two human isolates from Egypt, and distant (78-96%) from 16 other HEV isolates from human and animals.

Genes or proteins
ORF-1,2,3 overlap region
Analysis methods
phylogenetic analysis; sequence comparison
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Thirteen percent of Cairo work horses had IgG antibodies to Hepatitis E virus detected by ELISA, indicating prior exposure.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Sera from 200 Cairo work horses were tested by ELISA for the presence of IgG anti-HEV antibody revealed a seropositivity of 13%.

Method
ELISA
Sample type
sera
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Horses in Cairo, Egypt, were serologically and molecularly positive for hepatitis E virus, indicating active infection and supporting zoonotic surveillance of equine populations.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We surveyed work horses in Cairo for evidence of HEV exposure and viremia. Sera from 200 Cairo work horses were tested by ELISA for the presence of IgG anti-HEV antibody revealed a seropositivity of 13%. Among 100 samples processed for detection of viral genome by means of nested polymerase chain reaction (N-PCR), 4% were positive and indicative of viremia.

Method
ELISA; nested polymerase chain reaction
Sample type
sera
Geographic raw
Cairo
Country inferred
Egypt