Laboratory investigation and phylogenetic analysis of an imported Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus case in Greece.
Athanasios Kossyvakis1
Ying Tao2
Xiaoyan Lu2
Vasiliki Pogka1
Sotirios Tsiodras3
Mary Emmanouil1
Andreas F Mentis1
Suxiang Tong2
Dean D Erdman2
Antonios Antoniadis1
Affiliations3 institutions
National Influenza Reference Laboratory of Southern Greece, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, Athens, Greece.
Division of Viral Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
Department of Epidemiological Surveillance and Intervention, Hellenic Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Athens, Greece.
Rapid and reliable laboratory diagnosis of persons suspected of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infection is important for timely implementation of infection control practices and disease management. In addition, monitoring molecular changes in the virus can help elucidate chains of transmission and identify mutations that might influence virus transmission efficiency. This was illustrated by a recent laboratory investigation we conducted on an imported MERS-CoV case in Greece. Two oropharyngeal swab specimens were collected on the 1st and 2nd day of patient hospitalization and tested using two real-time RT-PCR (rRT-PCR) assays targeting the UpE and Orf-1a regions of the MERS-CoV genome and RT-PCR and partial sequencing of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and nucleocapsid genes. Serum specimens were also collected and serological test were performed. Results from the first swab sample were inconclusive while the second swab was strongly positive for MERS-CoV RNA by rRT-PCR and confirmed positive by RT-PCR and partial gene sequencing. Positive serologic test results further confirmed MERS-CoV infection. Full-length nucleocapsid and spike gene coding sequences were later obtained from the positive swab sample. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the virus was closely related to recent human-derived MERS-CoV strains obtained in Jeddah and Makkah, Saudi Arabia, in April 2014 and dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. These findings were consistent with the patient's history. We also identified a unique amino acid substitution in the spike receptor binding domain that may have implications for receptor binding efficiency. Our initial inconclusive rRT-PCR results highlight the importance of collecting multiple specimens from suspect MERS-CoV cases and particularly specimens from the lower respiratory tract.
LaboratoriesPhylogenyAgedGenes, ViralGreeceHumansMiddle East Respiratory Syndrome CoronavirusOpen Reading FramesViral Proteins
Structured evidence records
Evidence records
4 total
Genomic Evolution1 records
Genomic EvolutionExtraction confidence 0.88
Key finding
Phylogenetic analysis of MERS-CoV genome sequences from a human case in Greece showed close relatedness to human and camel strains from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, with a unique amino acid substitution in the spike receptor binding domain.
Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the virus was closely related to recent human-derived MERS-CoV strains obtained in Jeddah and Makkah, Saudi Arabia, in April 2014 and dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Full-length nucleocapsid and spike gene coding sequences were later obtained from the positive swab sample.
Genes or proteins
nucleocapsid; spike; RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
Analysis methods
partial gene sequencing; phylogenetic analysis
Molecular Adaptation1 records
Molecular AdaptationExtraction confidence 0.80
Key finding
An amino acid substitution was detected in the MERS-CoV spike receptor binding domain that may alter receptor binding efficiency.
We also identified a unique amino acid substitution in the spike receptor binding domain that may have implications for receptor binding efficiency.
Method
gene sequencing; phylogenetic analysis
Spillover Event1 records
Spillover EventExtraction confidence 0.95
Key finding
A human MERS-CoV infection imported to Greece was phylogenetically linked to viruses detected in dromedary camels from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, indicating camel-to-human spillover.
Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the virus was closely related to recent human-derived MERS-CoV strains obtained in Jeddah and Makkah, Saudi Arabia, in April 2014 and dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. These findings were consistent with the patient's history.
A conformation-dependent neutralizing monoclonal antibody specifically targeting receptor-binding domain in Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus spike protein
Du
2014
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Epidemiological update: Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV)
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus quasispecies that include homologues of human isolates revealed through whole-genome analysis and virus cultured from dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia.