A possible risk of environmental exposure to HEV in Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria
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Date
2020-08-13
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
"Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection is both a major public health
concern and emerging global health concern, with a documented
incidence of 20 million, 3.4 million clinical cases, 70,000 deaths,
and 3,000 stillbirths. The aetiologic agent, HEV is a primarily
enterally transmitted hepatotropic virus.
Fecal samples were collected from three selected pig farms
across Ibadan, South-west Nigeria. Randomly picked samples
were pooled per unit pen and fecal suspensions prepared were
subjected to HEV Antigen (Ag) enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay. Molecular probing was done by Reverse Transcription and
nested polymerase reaction (RT-nPCR) and deep sequencing.
Sequencing was done paired-end for 300 cycles using the HiSeq
system. Overall farm prevalence of 66.7% (2/3) and prevalence at
individual level of 13.2% (9/68) were recorded. All nine samples
positive for the ELISA screen were negative when subjected to
RT-nPCR assays. Further, on deep sequencing, no HEV genomic
fragment was found in the sample using de-novo assembly.
Findings suggest possibly inapparent HEV in the pigs studied or
a yet to be identified protein with HEV-Ag cross-reactivity ability on
ELISA, thus constituting a possible risk of exposure to HEV infection
in the population. Consequently, we recommend prompt intervention
to unravel the mystery and break the chain of transmission.
Description
Keywords
Pig, HEV antigen, hepatitis E virus, HEV RNA, Nigeria, viral hepatitis
