Literature detail

Genomic analysis reveals G3P[13] porcine rotavirus A interspecific transmission to human from pigs in a swine farm with diarrhoea outbreak.

Nan Yan1 Hua Yue2,1 Yuanwei Wang1 Bin Zhang2,1 Cheng Tang1,2
Affiliations 2 institutions
  1. College of Life Science and Technology, Southwest Minzu University, Chengdu, PR China.
  2. Key Laboratory of Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau Animal Genetic Resource Reservation and Utilization, Chengdu, PR China.
PMID 33295864 2021 J Gen Virol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Rotavirus A (RVA) is a major diarrhoea-causing pathogen in young animals and children. The zoonotic potential of RVA has received extensive attention in recent years. In May 2018, an outbreak of diarrhoea among piglets occurred on a swine farm in Sichuan province, PR China. RVA was detected in 95.7 % (22/23) of piglet samples, 60 % (9/15) of sow samples and 100 % (3/3) of pig-breeder faecal samples. The predominant RVA genotype on this swine farm was G3P[13], and G3P[13] RVA was also detected in the three breeder faecal samples. Three G3P[13] RVA strains were isolated from a piglet faecal sample, a sow faecal sample and a pig-breeder faecal sample, and were named SCLS-X1, SCLS-3 and SCLS-R3, respectively. The complete sequences of 11 gene segments of these three isolates were derived. Phylogenetic analysis showed that ten gene segments (VP7, VP4, VP1-VP3 and NSP1-NSP5) of pig-breeder isolate SCLS-R3 were closely related to pig isolates SCLS-X1 and SCLS-3 from this farm. Only the VP6 gene shared higher homology with human RVA strain I321. Therefore, a G3P[13] porcine RVA strain most likely infected pig breeders. These results provided the first complete epidemiological link demonstrating interspecies transmission of G3P[13] RVA from pigs to human. Our data contribute to an improved understanding of the genetic evolution and interspecies transmission of RVA.

genome interspecies transmission pig rotavirus A Adult Animals Diarrhea Disease Outbreaks Farms Feces Female Genome, Viral Humans Male Phylogeny Rotavirus Rotavirus Infections Swine

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Complete genomic and phylogenetic analysis revealed that the G3P[13] rotavirus A strain from pig breeders was highly similar to pig strains, supporting zoonotic transmission from pigs to humans.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The complete sequences of 11 gene segments of three G3P[13] rotavirus A isolates from piglet, sow, and pig-breeder faecal samples were derived. Phylogenetic analysis showed that ten gene segments of the human isolate were closely related to pig isolates, indicating interspecies transmission from pigs to humans.

Genes or proteins
VP7; VP4; VP1; VP2; VP3; NSP1; NSP2; NSP3; NSP4; NSP5; VP6
Analysis methods
complete genome sequencing; phylogenetic analysis
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

A diarrhoea outbreak on a swine farm in Sichuan province, China, involved porcine rotavirus A genotype G3P[13], which infected pigs and pig breeders, indicating animal-to-human transmission during the outbreak.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

In May 2018, an outbreak of diarrhoea among piglets occurred on a swine farm in Sichuan province, PR China. RVA was detected in 95.7 % (22/23) of piglet samples, 60 % (9/15) of sow samples and 100 % (3/3) of pig-breeder faecal samples. The predominant RVA genotype on this swine farm was G3P[13], and G3P[13] RVA was also detected in the three breeder faecal samples.

Method
genomic analysis; phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Sichuan province, PR China
Country inferred
China
Outbreak setting
swine farm
Outbreak time
May 2018
Outbreak scale
22/23 piglet samples, 9/15 sow samples, 3/3 breeder faecal samples positive for RVA
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

Genomic and phylogenetic analyses demonstrated spillover of a G3P[13] porcine rotavirus A strain from pigs to human pig breeders on a swine farm in Sichuan, China.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Three G3P[13] RVA strains were isolated from a piglet, a sow, and a pig-breeder, and phylogenetic analysis showed the human isolate was closely related to porcine isolates, indicating a G3P[13] porcine RVA strain most likely infected pig breeders.

Method
sequencing; phylogenetic analysis
Study design
outbreak investigation
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Sichuan province, PR China
Country inferred
China