Scientific Reports (Feb 2022)

Advanced sequencing approaches detected insertions of viral and human origin in the viral genome of chronic hepatitis E virus patients

  • C.-Patrick Papp,
  • Paula Biedermann,
  • Dominik Harms,
  • Bo Wang,
  • Marianne Kebelmann,
  • Mira Choi,
  • Johannes Helmuth,
  • Victor M. Corman,
  • Andrea Thürmer,
  • Britta Altmann,
  • Patrycja Klink,
  • Jörg Hofmann,
  • C.-Thomas Bock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-05706-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The awareness of hepatitis E virus (HEV) increased significantly in the last decade due to its unexpectedly high prevalence in high-income countries. There, infections with HEV-genotype 3 (HEV-3) are predominant which can progress to chronicity in immunocompromised individuals. Persistent infection and antiviral therapy can select HEV-3 variants; however, the spectrum and occurrence of HEV-3 variants is underreported. To gain in-depth insights into the viral population and to perform detailed characterization of viral genomes, we used a new approach combining long-range PCR with next-generation and third-generation sequencing which allowed near full-length sequencing of HEV-3 genomes. Furthermore, we developed a targeted ultra-deep sequencing approach to assess the dynamics of clinically relevant mutations in the RdRp-region and to detect insertions in the HVR-domain in the HEV genomes. Using this new approach, we not only identified several insertions of human (AHNAK, RPL18) and viral origin (RdRp-derived) in the HVR-region isolated from an exemplary sample but detected a variant containing two different insertions simultaneously (AHNAK- and RdRp-derived). This finding is the first HEV-variant recognized as such showing various insertions in the HVR-domain. Thus, this molecular approach will add incrementally to our current knowledge of the HEV-genome organization and pathogenesis in chronic hepatitis E.