Viruses (Apr 2021)

Molecular Characterization and Seroprevalence of Hepatitis E Virus in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients and Solid Organ Transplant Recipients

  • Juozas Grigas,
  • Maria Montoya,
  • Evelina Simkute,
  • Marius Buitkus,
  • Ruta Zagrabskaite,
  • Arnoldas Pautienius,
  • Dainius Razukevicius,
  • Laimas Virginijus Jonaitis,
  • Gediminas Kiudelis,
  • Jurgita Skieceviciene,
  • Ruta Vaiciuniene,
  • Asta Stankuviene,
  • Inga Arune Bumblyte,
  • Juozas Kupcinskas,
  • Arunas Stankevicius

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13040670
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 670

Abstract

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Seroprevalence rates and molecular characterization of hepatitis E virus (HEV) prevalent in the Lithuanian human population has not yet been evaluated. Immunosuppressed individuals have been recognized as a risk group for chronic hepatitis due to HEV genotype 3 (HEV-3) infections. The objectives of the present study were to determine prevalence rates of anti-HEV antibodies among inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients and solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients, to isolate and characterize HEV strain present in the Lithuanian human population, and to investigate its capacity to infect non-human primate (MARC-145 and Vero), swine (PK-15) and murine (Neuro-2a) cells in vitro. In the present study, the significant difference of anti-HEV IgG prevalence between healthy (3.0% (95% CI 0–6.3)) and immunosuppressed individuals (12.0% [95% CI 8.1–15.9]) was described. Moreover, our findings showed that anti-HEV IgG seropositivity can be significantly predicted by increasing age (OR = 1.032, p p < 0.01) and reception of SOT (OR = 4.042, <0.05). Locally isolated HEV strain clustered within genotype 3i subtype of genotype 3 and was capable of infecting MARC-145 cells. This study demonstrates higher HEV seroprevalence in the risk group compared to healthy control individuals without confidence interval overlap. The high level of genetic homology between human and animal strains in Lithuania and the capacity of locally isolated strains to infect cells of non-human origin suggests its potential for zoonotic transmission.

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