Viruses (Aug 2021)

Genomic Epidemiology and Evolution of Duck Hepatitis A Virus

  • Enikő Fehér,
  • Szilvia Jakab,
  • Krisztina Bali,
  • Eszter Kaszab,
  • Borbála Nagy,
  • Katalin Ihász,
  • Ádám Bálint,
  • Vilmos Palya,
  • Krisztián Bányai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13081592
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. 1592

Abstract

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Duck hepatitis A virus (DHAV), an avian picornavirus, causes high-mortality acute disease in ducklings. Among the three serotypes, DHAV-1 is globally distributed, whereas DHAV-2 and DHAV-3 serotypes are chiefly restricted to Southeast Asia. In this study, we analyzed the genomic evolution of DHAV-1 strains using extant GenBank records and genomic sequences of 10 DHAV-1 strains originating from a large disease outbreak in 2004–2005, in Hungary. Recombination analysis revealed intragenotype recombination within DHAV-1 as well as intergenotype recombination events involving DHAV-1 and DHAV-3 strains. The intergenotype recombination occurred in the VP0 region. Diversifying selection seems to act at sites of certain genomic regions. Calculations estimated slightly lower rates of evolution of DHAV-1 (mean rates for individual protein coding regions, 5.6286 × 10−4 to 1.1147 × 10−3 substitutions per site per year) compared to other picornaviruses. The observed evolutionary mechanisms indicate that whole-genome-based analysis of DHAV strains is needed to better understand the emergence of novel strains and their geographical dispersal.

Keywords