Viruses (Jan 2019)

A Survey of Recent Adenoviral Respiratory Pathogens in Hong Kong Reveals Emergent and Recombinant Human Adenovirus Type 4 (HAdV-E4) Circulating in Civilian Populations

  • Jing Zhang,
  • June Kang,
  • Shoaleh Dehghan,
  • Siddharth Sridhar,
  • Susanna K. P. Lau,
  • Junxian Ou,
  • Patrick C. Y. Woo,
  • Qiwei Zhang,
  • Donald Seto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v11020129
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 129

Abstract

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Human adenovirus type 4 (HAdV-E4), which is intriguingly limited to military populations, causes acute respiratory disease with demonstrated morbidity and mortality implications. This respiratory pathogen contains genome identity with chimpanzee adenoviruses, indicating zoonotic origins. A signature of these “old„ HAdV-E4 is the absence of a critical replication motif, NF-I, which is found in all HAdV respiratory pathogens and most HAdVs. However, our recent survey of flu-like disease in children in Hong Kong reveals that the emergent HAdV-E4 pathogens circulating in civilian populations contain NF-I, indicating recombination and reflecting host-adaptation that enables the “new„ HAdV-E4 to replicate more efficiently in human cells and foretells more potential HAdV-E4 outbreaks in immune-naïve civilian populations. Special attention should be paid by clinicians to this emergent and recombinant HAdV-E4 circulating in civilian populations.

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