HBV core sequence: definition of genotype-specific variability and correlation with geographical origin


Autoria(s): Jazayeri, M.; Basuni, A. A.; Sran, N.; Gish, R.; Cooksley, G.; Locarnini, S.; Carman, W. F.
Contribuinte(s)

H. C. Thomas

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

There are eight genotypes and nine subtypes of HBV. Small differences in geographical origin are associated with sequence changes in the surface gene. Here, we compared core gene sequences from different genotypes and geographical regions. Specific combinations of 24 amino acid substitutions at nine residues allowed allocation of a sequence to a subtype. Six of these nine residues were located in different T cell epitopes depending on HBV geographical area and/or genotype. Thirty-seven nucleotide changes were associated uniquely with specific genotypes and subtypes. Unique amino acid and nucleotide variants were found in a majority of sequences from specific countries as well as within subtype ayw2 and adr. Specific nucleotide motifs were defined for Korean, Indian, Chinese, Italian and Pacific region isolates. Finally, we observed amino acid motifs that were common to either South-east Asian or Western populations, irrespective of subtype. We believe that HBV strains spread within constrained ethnic groups, result in selection pressures that define sequence variability within each subtype. It suggests that particular T cell epitopes are specific for geographical regions, and thus ethnic groups; this may affect the design of immunomodulatory therapies.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:70680

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing

Palavras-Chave #Gastroenterology & Hepatology #Infectious Diseases #Virology #C Gene Variability #Hbcag #Hbv Genotypes #Hbv Subtypes #Hepatitis-b-virus #Complete Nucleotide-sequences #Naturally-occurring Mutation #Surface-antigen Subtypes #Chronic Active Hepatitis #T-cell Epitopes #Fulminant-hepatitis #Phylogenetic Relatedness #Nucleocapsid Antigen #Immature Secretion #C1 #321010 Infectious Diseases #730101 Infectious diseases
Tipo

Journal Article