Publications by authors named "Juan Arbiza"

Porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) is a highly damaging pathogen for pig farming, causing significant economic losses. Despite the availability of vaccines based on different technologies, the virus steadily infects the world's pig population. In this context, virus-like particles (VLPs) constitute appealing alternatives for vaccine development as they lack the viral genome but present intact external surfaces.

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Hepatitis E Virus (HEV) infection is an emergent zoonotic disease of increasing concern in developed regions. HEV genotype 3 (HEV-3) is mainly transmitted through consumption of contaminated food in high-income countries and is classified into at least 13 subtypes (3a-3n), based on -distance values from complete genomes. In Latin America, HEV epidemiology studies are very scant.

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Hepatitis E caused by hepatitis E virus (HEV) is considered an emerging foodborne zoonosis in industrialized, non-endemic countries. Domestic pigs and wild boars are considered the main reservoir of HEV. However, HEV can also infect an ever-expanding host range of animals, but they exact role in transmitting the virus to other species or humans is mostly unknown.

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Article Synopsis
  • A reverse transcription multiplex PCR method followed by next-generation sequencing was used to identify multiple respiratory RNA viruses in Montevideo, Uruguay, during 2020 and 2021.
  • The study found that SARS-CoV-2 was cocirculating with several other viruses, including human rhinovirus, human respiratory syncytial virus, influenza A, and metapneumovirus.
  • This methodology allows for the detection of various viruses simultaneously, which is beneficial for understanding respiratory virus interactions in both pandemic and post-pandemic scenarios.
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Torque Teno Virus (TTV) was initially associated with post-transfusion hepatitis, but growing evidence of its ubiquity in humans is compatible to no apparent clinical significance. TTV is a small non-enveloped virus with a circular single-negative-stranded DNA genome, belonging to the Anelloviridae family. Currently, TTVs are divided in seven phylogenetic groups and are further classified into 21 species.

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Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a leading cause of acute hepatitis worldwide. Hepatitis E is an enterically transmitted zoonotic disease that causes large waterborne epidemic outbreaks in developing countries and has become an increasing public-health concern in industrialized countries. In this setting, the infection is usually acute and self-limiting in immunocompetent individuals, although chronic cases in immunocompromised patients have been reported, frequently associated with several extrahepatic manifestations.

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Data regarding PRRSV-2 in South America are scant and a coordinated criterion for molecular characterization is needed. A phylogenetic analysis was performed using a dataset of 76 ORF5 sequences from South America, and results showed the identification of lineage 5 in the early 2000s and the predominance of lineage 1 at least since 2013. Lineage 1 sequences were further classified into sub-lineages according to a recent molecular characterization study of PRRSV-2 in United States.

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Deletions frequently occur in the six accessory genes of SARS-CoV-2, but most genomes with deletions are sporadic and have limited spreading capability. Here, we analyze deletions in the ORF7a of the N.7 lineage, a unique Uruguayan clade from the Brazilian B.

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Background: Evolutionary changes in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) include indels in non-structural, structural, and accessory open reading frames (ORFs) or genes.

Objectives: We track indels in accessory ORFs to infer evolutionary gene patterns and epidemiological links between outbreaks.

Methods: Genomes from Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) case-patients were Illumina sequenced using ARTIC_V3.

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Hepatitis E Virus (HEV) infection is an emergent zoonotic disease, where chronic hepatitis E associated to solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients, related to genotype 3, is the clinical manifestation of major concern. In this setting, ribavirin (RBV) treatment is the only available therapy, though drug-resistant variants could emerge leading to a therapeutic failure. Crystallographic structures have not been reported for most of the HEV proteins, including the RNA-polymerase (RdRp).

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Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a leading cause of acute viral hepatitis worldwide. We report the full-length genome sequence of an HEV-3 strain obtained from a chronically infected patient from Uruguay. This strain shared only 86% nucleotide sequence identity with the most closely related reference strain belonging to subtype 3m.

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Article Synopsis
  • Two significant COVID-19 variants, P.1 and P.2, originated in Brazil and have become more prevalent in South America due to their higher transmission rates and ability to evade immunity.
  • Recent genomic analyses have identified these variants in Uruguay, confirming their spread.
  • The genomes of the P.1 and P.2 variants in Uruguay contain all the key genetic mutations that define them.
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The analysis of genetic diversity in SARS-CoV-2 is the focus of several studies, providing insights into how the virus emerged and evolves. Most common changes in SARS-CoV-2 are single or point nucleotide substitutions; meanwhile, insertions and deletions (indels) have been identified as a less frequent source of viral genetic variability. Here, we report the emergence of a 12-nucleotide deletion in ORF7a, resulting in a 4-amino acid in-frame deletion.

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Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection is a major cause of acute hepatitis worldwide. Clinical presentation of hepatitis E mainly occurs as an acute and self-limited disease, though chronic cases are now being commonly reported in immunocompromised individuals. In high-income developed areas and non-endemic regions, HEV is mainly transmitted by the zoonotic route through direct contact with infected animals or by consumption of contaminated meat products.

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Article Synopsis
  • High-risk human papillomaviruses (HR-HPVs), especially types 16 and 18, are linked to cervical cancer, and their proteins E5, E6, and E7 play a big role in making cancer cells grow and invade more easily.
  • Researchers created different cell lines to see how these proteins work together to help cancer cells survive and grow despite stress inside the cell.
  • The study found that cells with all three HPV proteins had increased growth and the ability to invade, along with changes in certain antioxidants that help cells deal with harmful conditions.
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The origin of the hepatitis B virus is a subject of wide deliberation among researchers. As a result, increasing academic interest has focused on the spread of the virus in different animal species. However, the sources of viral infection for many of these animals are unknown since transmission may occur from animal to animal, human to human, animal to human, and human to animal.

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BACKGROUND Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a common cause of acute hepatitis in developing regions. In high-income countries, hepatitis E is an emergent zoonotic disease of increasing concern. Clinically, the infection is usually acute and self-limited in immunocompetent individuals, although rare chronic cases in immunocompromised patients have been reported.

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Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is the most common cause of acute viral hepatitis worldwide, accounting for 20 million infections per year and 70,000 deaths. In developed regions, sporadic locally acquired infections are most commonly caused by HEV3, and in this setting Hepatitis E is mainly asymptomatic. However, certain group of patients HEV infection may present as a fulminant disease or progressive fibrosis.

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Mayaro (MAYV) and Una (UNAV) are emerging arboviruses belonging to the genus of the family. These viruses can produce febrile disease with symptoms such as fever, headache, myalgia, skin rash and incapacitating poly-arthralgia. Serological studies indicate that both viruses are circulating in different countries in Latin America.

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Objective: We aimed to detect and characterize hepatitis E virus (HEV) RNA in sera samples from a pediatric population infected with the hepatitis A virus (HAV) exhibiting acute hepatitis and to correlate the infection status with the clinical outcome.

Methods: Seventy-five ELISA-positive samples from children containing anti-HAV and anti-HEV IgM were used to amplify and characterize partial regions within HEV ORF2. A statistical comparison of clinical data between HEV IgM-positive/HEV RNA-positive patients and HEV IgM-positive/HEV RNA-negative patients was performed.

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Torque teno sus virus (TTSuV) infection is common worldwide in both healthy and diseased swine and a relationship between this virus and a particular disease in pigs has not been established. This work aimed to investigate the presence of TTSuV1 and TTSuVk2a in Porcine Circovirus type 2 (PCV2)-infected and non-infected domestic pigs and free-living wild boars from Uruguay. Our data evidenced a high frequency of detection and a wide circulation of TTSuV among pig herds and wild boar populations.

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Bovine parainfluenza virus-3 (BPIV-3) is a recognized respiratory pathogen of cattle, and it has also been identified in aborted fetuses. However, little is known of this agent as a reproductive pathogen and detailed descriptions of fetal pathology on natural cases are lacking in the scientific literature. This article describes and illustrates lesions in a fetus spontaneously aborted by a first-calving Holstein heifer, naturally infected with BPIV-3 genotype A, broadening the current knowledge on fetal pathology by this virus.

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Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection involving zoonotic genotypes is a public health problem in high-income and non-endemic developing countries. Herein we report the detection of a human genotype 1 (HEV-1) strain infecting a domestic pig, which is not considered a natural reservoir of this genotype. Viral load was quantified in stool by Real-Time qPCR and sequence analyses were performed.

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Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is one of the most frequent causes of acute viral hepatitis of enteric transmission worldwide. In South America the overall epidemiology has been little studied, and the burden of the disease remains largely unknown. A research of all scientific articles about HEV circulation in South America until November 2017 was carried out.

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Objective: This study aims to investigate the HPV16 variant distribution by sequence analyses of E6, E7 oncogenes and the Long Control Region (LCR), from cervical cells collected from Uruguayan women, and to reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships among variants.

Methods: Forty-seven HPV16 variants, obtained from women with HSIL, LSIL, ASCUS and NILM cytological classes were analyzed for LCR and 12 were further studied for E6 and E7. Detailed sequence comparison, genetic heterogeneity analyses and phylogenetic reconstruction were performed.

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