Literature detail

Molecular epidemiology and phylogeny of the emerging zoonotic virus Rocahepevirus: A global genetic analysis.

Han Wu1 Lu Zhou1 Fengge Wang1 Zixiang Chen1 Yihan Lu2
Affiliations 2 institutions
  1. Department of Epidemiology, Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Public Health Safety (Fudan University), School of Public Health, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China.
  2. Department of Epidemiology, Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Public Health Safety (Fudan University), School of Public Health, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China. Electronic address: [email protected].
PMID 38244748 2024 Infect Genet Evol eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Human infections with Rocahepevirus ratti genotype C1 (HEV-C1) in Hong Kong of China, Canada, Spain, and France have drawn worldwide concern towards Rocahepevirus. This study conducted a global genetic analysis of Rocahepevirus, aiming to furnish comprehensive molecular insights and promote further research. We retrieved 817 Rocahepevirus sequences from the GenBank database through October 31, 2023, categorizing them according to research, sample collection area and date, genotype, host, and sequence length. Subsequently, we conducted descriptive epidemiological, phylogenetic evolutionary, and protein polymorphism (in length and identity) analyses on these sequences. Rocahepevirus genomes were identified across twenty-eight countries, predominantly in Asia (71.73%, 586/817) and Europe (26.44%, 216/817). The HEV-C1 dominates Rocahepevirus (77.2%, 631/817), while newly discovered Rocahepevirus genotypes (C3/C4/C5 and other unclassified genotypes) were primarily identified in Europe (25/120) and China (91/120). Muridae animals (72.5%, 592/817) serve as the primary hosts for Rocahepevirus, with other hosts encompassing species from the families Soricidae, Hominidae, Mustelidae, and Cricetidae. Additionally, Rocahepevirus genomes (C1 genotype) were identified in sewage samples recently. The phylogenetic evolution of Rocahepevirus exhibits considerable variation. Specifically, HEV-C1 can be classified into at least six genetic groups (G1 to G6), with human HEV-C1 distributed across multiple evolutionary clades. The overall ORF1 and ORF2 amino acid sequence lengths were significantly different (P < 0.001) across Rocahepevirus genotypes. HEV-C1/C2/C3 and HEV-C4/C5 displayed substantial differences in amino acid sequence identity (58.4%-59.6%). The identification of Rocahepevirus genomes has expanded across numerous countries, particularly in European and Asian countries, coinciding with an expanding host range and emergence of new genotypes. The evolutionary path of Rocahepevirus is intricate, where the HEV-C1 dominates globally and internally forms multiple evolutionary groups (G1 to G6), exhibiting diverse genetic variation within human HEV-C1. Significant differences exist in the protein polymorphism (in length and identity) across Rocahepevirus genotypes. Given Rocahepevirus's shift from an animal virus to a zoonotic pathogen, worldwide cooperation in monitoring Rocahepevirus genomes is vital.

HEV-C1 Molecular epidemiology Phylogeny Protein polymorphism Rocahepevirus Mustelidae Viruses Animals Arvicolinae Databases, Nucleic Acid Hong Kong Humans Molecular Epidemiology Muridae Phylogeny

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Phylogenetic and protein polymorphism analyses of 817 Rocahepevirus genome sequences uncovered multiple evolutionary groups within the HEV-C1 genotype, demonstrating significant genetic divergence and host diversity including humans and rodents.

Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We retrieved 817 Rocahepevirus sequences from the GenBank database through October 31, 2023 ... Subsequently, we conducted descriptive epidemiological, phylogenetic evolutionary, and protein polymorphism (in length and identity) analyses on these sequences. Specifically, HEV-C1 can be classified into at least six genetic groups (G1 to G6), with human HEV-C1 distributed across multiple evolutionary clades.

Genes or proteins
ORF1; ORF2
Analysis methods
phylogenetic analysis; protein polymorphism analysis; global genetic analysis
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Phylogenetic analysis shows dominant circulation of Rocahepevirus HEV-C1 in Muridae hosts with multiple evolutionary clades, indicating ongoing diversification in rodent reservoirs.

Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Muridae animals (72.5%, 592/817) serve as the primary hosts for Rocahepevirus ... The phylogenetic evolution of Rocahepevirus exhibits considerable variation. Specifically, HEV-C1 can be classified into at least six genetic groups (G1 to G6).

Genes or proteins
ORF1; ORF2
Analysis methods
phylogenetic analysis; protein polymorphism analysis; global genetic analysis
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.75
Key finding

Rocahepevirus was identified in multiple non-human mammalian families, suggesting animal-to-animal transmission among rodent, shrew, mustelid, and cricetid hosts.

Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Muridae animals (72.5%, 592/817) serve as the primary hosts for Rocahepevirus, with other hosts encompassing species from the families Soricidae, Hominidae, Mustelidae, and Cricetidae.

Method
database retrieval; phylogenetic evolutionary analysis
Study design
phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Rocahepevirus genomes were detected in multiple animal families, mainly Muridae, indicating broad global genomic surveillance of this zoonotic virus.

Host
Location
Supporting text

We retrieved 817 Rocahepevirus sequences from the GenBank database through October 31, 2023, categorizing them according to research, sample collection area and date, genotype, host, and sequence length. Muridae animals (72.5%, 592/817) serve as the primary hosts for Rocahepevirus, with other hosts encompassing species from the families Soricidae, Hominidae, Mustelidae, and Cricetidae.

Method
genomic analysis; phylogenetic analysis
Geographic raw
global