PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

An outbreak of acute respiratory disease caused by a virus associated RNA II gene mutation strain of human adenovirus 7 in China, 2015.

  • Xiaoxia Yang,
  • Qiongshu Wang,
  • Beibei Liang,
  • Fuli Wu,
  • Hao Li,
  • Hongbo Liu,
  • Chunyu Sheng,
  • Qiuxia Ma,
  • Chaojie Yang,
  • Jing Xie,
  • Peng Li,
  • Leili Jia,
  • Ligui Wang,
  • Xinying Du,
  • Shaofu Qiu,
  • Hongbin Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172519
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0172519

Abstract

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Human adenovirus 7 (HAdV-7) strains are a major cause of acute respiratory disease (ARD) among adults and children, associated with fatal pneumonia. An ARD outbreak caused by HAdV-7 that involved 739 college students was reported in this article. To better understand the underlying cause of this large-scale epidemic, virus strains were isolated from infected patients and sequence variations of the whole genome sequence were detected. Evolutionary trees and alignment results indicated that the major capsid protein genes hexon and fibre were strongly conserved among serotype 7 strains in China at that time. Instead, the HAdV-7 strains presented three thymine deletions in the virus associated RNA (VA RNA) II terminal region. We also found that the mutation might lead to increased mRNA expression of an adjacent gene, L1 52/55K, and thus promoted faster growth. These findings suggest that sequence variation of VA RNA II gene was a potential cause of such a severe HAdV-7 infection and this gene should be a new-emerging factor to be monitored for better understanding of HAdV-7 infection.