The causal relationship between HPV and cervical cancer in association with the high prevalence of high risk HPV genotypes led to the design of HPV vaccines based on the major capsid L1 protein. In recent years, capsid protein L2 has also become a focal point in the field of vaccine research. The present review focuses on the variability of HPV16 L1 and L2 genes, emphasizing the distribution of specific amino acid changes in the epitopes of capsid proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecombination is a driving force for the emergence, evolution and virulence/epidemics of viruses, comprising the Enterovirus genus of the Picornaviridae family, important for human and animal health. By analyzing 2949 complete genomes/coding sequences, we provide a thorough and up-to-date overview of the genome-wide patterns and hotspots of intertypic recombination between the genogroups of this genus. Two prominent recombination hotspots are identified/verified, at the 5'UTR-capsid region junction, and at the beginning of the P2 region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe tumor suppressor protein p16 plays a fundamental role in cell cycle regulation and exerts a protective effect against tumor growth. Two different polymorphisms at positions 540 and 580 at the 3'UTR of exon 3 of p16 gene are implicated in several types of cancer, while their role in cervical cancer development remains rather vague. In the present study, we investigated for the impact of p16 genotypes/haplotypes on patients' vulnerability to cervical disease and examined whether these factors can be used as progression markers in the Greek population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecombination has been recognized as a major mechanism of evolution in enteroviruses. The Echovirus 30 (E-30) strain Gior was sequenced and phylogenetically compared to all available E-30 sequences to detect recombination events between the 5΄UTR and VP1 genomic regions. The comparison of phylogenetic trees of the 5΄UTR and VP1 revealed incongruences concerning strains, lineages and sub-lineages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Microbiol
October 2017
J Med Microbiol
September 2017
Polymorphic variability in the tumour-suppressor protein p53 at codon 72 has a considerable impact on cervical cancer development. The present study clarified the association between p53 codon 72 genotypes and the risk of cervical disease in Greek patients. We also examined whether the presence of specific p53 genotypes in combination with HPV16 variants or E6 T350G sequence variation can modify an individual's susceptibility to cervical disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Many computational tools that detect recombination in viruses are not adapted for the ongoing genomic revolution. A computational tool is needed, that will rapidly scan hundreds/thousands of genomes or sequence fragments and detect candidate recombination events that may later be further analyzed with more sensitive and specialized methods.
Results: T-RECs, a Windows based graphical tool, employs pairwise alignment of sliding windows and can perform (i) genotyping, (ii) clustering of new genomes, (iii) detect recent recombination events among different evolutionary lineages, (iv) manual inspection of detected recombination events by similarity plots and (v) annotation of genomic regions.
Mutations and recombination events have been identified in enteroviruses. Point mutations accumulate with a frequency of 6.3 × 10(-4) per base pair per replication cycle affecting the fitness, the circulation, and the infectivity of enteroviral strains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEchovirus 3 (E3) serotype has been related with several neurologic diseases, although it constitutes one of the rarely isolated serotypes, with no report of epidemics in Europe. The aim of the present study was to provide insights into the molecular epidemiology and evolution of this enterovirus serotype, while an E3 strain was isolated from sewage in Greece, four years after the initial isolation of the only reported E3 strain in the same geographical region. Phylogenetic analysis of the complete VP1 genomic region of that E3 strain and of those available in GenBank suggested three main genogroups that were further subdivided into seven subgenogroups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman enteroviruses (EV) belong to the Picornaviridae family and are among the most common viruses infecting humans. They consist of up to 100 immunologically and genetically distinct types: polioviruses, coxsackieviruses A and B, echoviruses, and the more recently characterized 43 EV types. Frequent recombinations and mutations in enteroviruses have been recognized as the main mechanisms for the observed high rate of evolution, thus enabling them to rapidly respond and adapt to new environmental challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnteroviruses, the main cause of aseptic meningitis, consist of 100 serotypes, and many of them have been associated with large outbreaks. In the present study, a comparison of RFLP analysis of the 5' untranslated region (5'UTR) and sequencing of both the 5'UTR and VP1 regions was conducted for epidemiological linkage of 27 clinical enterovirus strains. The clinical enterovirus strains were clustered into five restriction profile groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Global Polio Eradication Initiative was launched in 1988 with the aim to eliminate paralytic poliomyelitis. Two effective vaccines are available: inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) and oral polio vaccine (OPV). Since 1964, OPV has been used instead of IPV in most countries due to several economic and biological advantages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEchovirus 6 (E6) is one of the main enteroviral serotypes that was isolated from cases of aseptic meningitis and encephalitis during the last years in Greece. Two E6 (LR51A5 and LR61G3) were isolated from the sewage treatment plant unit in Larissa, Greece, in May 2006, 1 year before their characterization from aseptic meningitis cases. The two isolates were initially found to be intra-serotypic recombinants in the genomic region VP1, a finding that initiated a full genome sequence analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, the immunity level of the southern Greek population in the 1-10-year, 11-20-year, 21-30-year and 31-40-year age groups with regard to Sabin vaccine strains and a collection of 11 recombinant and three non-recombinant poliovirus vaccine strains was determined. The results showed the lowest neutralization titre in the 21-30-year-age group against poliovirus type 3. Moreover, the capsid coding region of OPV (oral poliovirus vaccine) derivatives was sequenced in order to identify mutations that might lead to antigenic changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to test the hypothesis that RNA structural elements promote the distribution of certain types of recombination junctions in each one of the 2C and 3D poliovirus genomic regions (Sabin 3/Sabin 2 or Sabin 1 in 2C and Sabin 2/Sabin 1 or Sabin 3 in 3D), we searched in 2C and 3D regions of reference Sabin strains for high probability RNA structural elements that could promote recombination. Recombination junctions that were identified in clinical strains of this study, as well as in clinical strains of previous studies, were superimposed on RNA secondary structure models of 2C and 3D genomic regions. Furthermore, we created an in vitro model, based on double infection of cell-culture with two poliovirus strains, for the production and identification of recombinant Sabin strains in 2C and 3D regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn echovirus 3 (Echo3) strain (strain LR31G7) was isolated from a sewage treatment plant in Greece in 2005. Full-genome molecular, phylogenetic, and SimPlot analyses were conducted in order to reveal the evolutionary pathways of the isolate. Nucleotide and phylogenetic analyses of part of the VP1 genomic region revealed that the isolated strain correlates with Echo3 strains isolated during the same year in France and Japan, implying that the same virus circulated in Europe and Asia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo enteroviruses from river water and four from sewage treatment plant were isolated in Larissa, Greece, that all shared the same sequence. A full genome analysis was conducted in an attempt to reveal the evolutionary pathways of one of the isolated strains (LR11F7). VP1 nucleotide and phylogenetic analysis revealed that the isolated strain had 78% homology with the echovirus 7 prototype strain Wallace.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAttenuated strains of Sabin poliovirus vaccine replicate in the human gut and in rare cases may cause vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis (VAPP). Mutations at specific sites of the genome and recombination between Sabin strains may result in the loss of the attenuated phenotype of OPV (Oral Poliovirus Vaccine) strains and the acquisition of traits characteristic of wild polioviruses, such as increased neurovirulence and loss of temperature sensitivity. In this study, we determined the phenotypic traits such as temperature sensitivity and growth kinetics of eight OPV isolates (six bi-recombinant and two non-recombinant).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRoutine diagnosis of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) is still based on classical virological procedures. Several enteroviruses serotypes are not easily isolated in cell cultures system used and routinely more than one passage in cell culture is performed. A total of 54 archived faecal samples were examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe genetic properties of strain K/2002, isolated from fecal samples of a 7-month-old child who had received his first oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) dose at the age of 3 months, are described. Preliminary sequencing characterization of isolate K/2002 revealed an S3/S2 recombination event at the 3' end of the VP1 coding region. A recombination event resulted in the introduction of six Sabin 2 amino acid residues in a Sabin 3 genomic background.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRetrospective molecular and phenotypic characterization of a vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) type 1 isolate (7/b/97) isolated from sewage in Athens, Greece, in 1997 is reported. VP1 sequencing of this isolate revealed 1.87% divergence from the VP1 region of reference strain Sabin 1, while further genomic characterization of isolate 7/b/97 revealed a recombination event in the nonstructural part of the genome between a vaccine strain and a nonvaccine strain probably belonging to Enterovirus species C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSix echovirus strains belonging to serotypes echovirus 6, 13, and 30 were investigated in the present work by sequencing of the whole 2C gene and about 560 nt of the 5' part of 3-dimensional genomic region. Four of the 6 echovirus strains were epidemics, whereas 2 were from sporadic cases. The whole procedure was carried out by using nucleotide distance matrices and phylogeny software.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 3D region of 46 clinical Coxsackievirus strains, primarily belonging to the human enterovirus B species (HEV-B), were analyzed using nucleotide distance matrices and phylogeny software. The conclusions from previously analyzed genomic regions (VP1-2A-2B-2C) of the aforementioned strains revealed that enteroviruses' inheritance is being guided by gene adaptation among viruses of different serotypes. In this report the comparison of partial VP1 and 3D gene phylogenies presented an obvious incongruence.
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