Viruses (Jul 2020)

Characterization of a Novel Rat Hepatitis E Virus Isolated from an Asian Musk Shrew (<i>Suncus murinus</i>)

  • Huimin Bai,
  • Wei Li,
  • Dawei Guan,
  • Juan Su,
  • Changwen Ke,
  • Yasushi Ami,
  • Yuriko Suzaki,
  • Naokazu Takeda,
  • Masamichi Muramatsu,
  • Tian-Cheng Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v12070715
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 715

Abstract

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The Asian musk shrew (shrew) is a new reservoir of a rat hepatitis E virus (HEV) that has been classified into genotype HEV-C1 in the species Orthohepevirus C. However, there is no information regarding classification of the new rat HEV based on the entire genome sequences, and it remains unclear whether rat HEV transmits from shrews to humans. We herein inoculated nude rats (Long-Evans rnu/rnu) with a serum sample from a shrew trapped in China, which was positive for rat HEV RNA, to isolate and characterize the rat HEV distributed in shrews. A rat HEV strain, S1129, was recovered from feces of the infected nude rat, indicating that rat HEV was capable of replicating in rats. S1129 adapted and grew well in PLC/PRF/5 cells, and the recovered virus (S1129c1) infected Wistar rats. The entire genomes of S1129 and S1129c1 contain four open reading frames and share 78.3–81.8% of the nucleotide sequence identities with known rat HEV isolates, demonstrating that rat HEVs are genetically diverse. We proposed that genotype HEV-C1 be further classified into subtypes HEV-C1a to HEV-C1d and that the S1129 strain circulating in the shrew belonged to the new subtype HEV-C1d. Further studies should focus on whether the S1129 strain infects humans.

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