Literature detail

Identification and genetic characterization of a distinct genotype of Puumala orthohantavirus in Hebei Province, China.

Yanan Cai1,2 Yamei Wei2,3 Guoyi Du4 Xinyang Zhang2 Zhenkun Wang1 Zhengguang Wang5 Zhanying Han2,3 Yanbo Zhang2,3 Yonggang Xu2,3 Xu Han2,3 Jiandong Li6 Qi Li1,2
Affiliations 6 institutions
  1. School of Public Health, Hebei Medical University, Shijiazhuang, China.
  2. Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention, Hebei Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Shijiazhuang, China.
  3. Hebei Key Laboratory of Pathogens and Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases, Hebei Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Shijiazhuang, China.
  4. Hebei Provincial Institute for Plague Control, Zhangjiakou, China.
  5. School of Public Health, Hebei University, Baoding, China.
  6. National Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China.
PMID 42113832 2026 PLoS Negl Trop Dis eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

Orthohantavirus infections pose a significant threat to human health, while numerous orthohantaviruses have been identified, suspected viral infections remain undiagnosed in the world, which highlights the need for further identification and characterization of viruses circulating in humans and host animals. In this study, viral metagenomics was utilized to investigate orthohantaviruses present in tissue samples collected from rodents trapped at the Bashang Grassland of Hebei Province, China. A total of 145 wild rodents belonging to six species were captured in the study area, and 725 tissue samples (lung, liver, kidney, spleen, gut) were collected in 2024. A Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV), named Guyuan strain, was identified in Myodes rufocanus, with a positive rate of 0.69%. The complete genomic sequences of the L, M, and S segments were obtained and confirmed by Sanger sequencing. Phylogenetic analysis of these genomic sequences with those of other orthohantavirus species showed that the L, M, and S segments clustered with PUUV genomic sequences, while sharing a nucleotide sequence similarity of 81.2%, 80.2%, and 84.3% with previously characterized reference viral strains Kitahiyama128L, Tobetsu_04, and Baltic/205 Cg, respectively. Amino acid homology analysis demonstrated that the sequences exhibited the highest identity to PUUV Hokkaido strain at a level of 95.4%, 94.6%, and 97.0% respectively. Viral particles were observed in lung and kidney tissues using transmission electron microscopy, and viral protein antigen was detected in viral RNA-positive lung, liver, and kidney tissues through immunofluorescence assay with antibodies against the PUUV nucleocapsid protein, thereby confirming the virus's multiorgan tropism. The results demonstrated that a distinct genotype of PUUV was circulating in rodents in the study areas, which may have implications for zoonotic transmission surveillance and public health management in Hebei Province.

Genotype Puumala virus Rodent Diseases Animals Arvicolinae China Genome, Viral Phylogeny RNA, Viral Rodentia

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.92
Key finding

A distinct genotype of Puumala orthohantavirus, named Guyuan strain, was identified in Myodes rufocanus rodents, showing multiorgan tropism and genetic divergence from known PUUV strains.

Host
Location
Supporting text

“A Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV), named Guyuan strain, was identified in Myodes rufocanus… Viral particles were observed in lung and kidney tissues… The results demonstrated that a distinct genotype of PUUV was circulating in rodents in the study area, which may have implications for zoonotic transmission surveillance.”

Method
viral metagenomics | Sanger sequencing | phylogenetic analysis | transmission electron microscopy | immunofluorescence assay
Sample type
lung | liver | kidney | spleen | gut | tissue samples
Study design
metagenomic surveillance
Transmission direction
animal reservoir only
Event type
rodent metagenomic survey
Geographic raw
Hebei Province, China | Bashang Grassland
Country inferred
CHN
Genes or proteins
L segment | M segment | S segment | nucleocapsid protein
Mechanism types
phylogenetic divergence | multiorgan tropism