Analysis of 27 rotavirus strains from vaccinated and unvaccinated children revealed reassortment events in 3 strains: a gene derived from a vaccine; a gene acquired from a circulating strain; and reassortment between circulating strains. Data suggest that the widespread use of this monovalent rotavirus vaccine may introduce vaccine genes into circulating human rotaviruses or vice versa.
Group A rotaviruses (RVAs) are a frequent cause of diarrhea in children. The RVA genome consists of 11 dsRNA segments that encode 6 structural (VP1–VP4, VP6, VP7) and 6 non-structural (NSP1– NSP6) proteins (
Vaccination is considered effective in reducing the consequences of RVA. Two vaccines, Rotarix (Glaxo SmithKline, Brentford, UK) and RotaTeq (Merck & Co., Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA), are licensed in several countries. Both vaccines demonstrated broad protection against the most common RVA genotypes (
In Brazil, Rotarix, a monovalent attenuated human rotavirus vaccine for infants 6–24 weeks of age, was introduced in the National Immunization Programs in March, 2006. The vaccine is delivered in 2 doses,
During 2008–2010, fecal samples were collected from 3,852 children; 702 specimens (18.2%) had RVA-positive ELISA results; 27 of those (3.8%) were characterized as G1P[8] by using reverse transcription-PCR. Eighteen of the 27 specimens were from vaccinated children (
| Strain | State | Age (mo)† | Rotarix doses (mo/yr) | Time elapsed between vaccination and hospitalization | Clinical symptoms | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 2nd | Diarrhea‡ | Blood | Fever | Vomit | ||||
| ES15221–08 | ES | 42 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| SE15901–08 | SE | 2 | 09/2008 | – | 7 d | 3 | No | No | Yes |
| SE 16536–09 | SE | 2 | – | – | – | 2 | No | Yes | Yes |
| SE 16537–09 | SE | 4 | 03/2009 | – | 2 mo | 6 | No | Yes | Yes |
| SE 16779–09 | SE | 41 | 03/2006 | 05/2006 | 37 mo | 1 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| SE 16782–09 | SE | 19 | 02/2008 | 04/2008 | 15 mo | 3 | No | No | y |
| SE 16800–09 | SE | 7 | 02/2009 | – | 5 mo | 3 | – | No | No |
| SE 16803–09 | SE | 10 | 11/2008 | 01/2009 | 6 mo | 1 | No | Yes | Yes |
| SE 16894–09 | SE | 20 | 02/2008 | 05/2008 | 15 mo | 2 | No | Yes | No |
| SE 16897–09 | SE | 15 | 08/2008 | 10/2008 | 10 mo | 1 | No | No | Yes |
| SE 16898–09 | SE | 4 | 06/2009 | – | 2 mo | 1 | No | No | Yes |
| SE 16977–09 | SE | 9 | 02/2009 | 04/2009 | 4 mo | 13 | No | Yes | Yes |
| SE 16978–09 | SE | 10 | 01/2009 | 03/2009 | 6 mo | 2 | No | Yes | No |
| SE 17120–09 | SE | 22 | 02/2008 | 05/2008 | 17 mo | 1 | No | No | Yes |
| SE 17122–09 | SE | 9 | 07/2008 | 09/2008 | 5 mo | 2 | – | Yes | No |
| SE 17123–09 | SE | 8 | – | – | – | 3 | No | Yes | Yes |
| SE 17241–09 | SE | 7 | 06/2008 | 08/2008 | 3 mo | 2 | No | Yes | Yes |
| PE17887–09 | PE | 6 | – | – | – | – | No | Yes | Yes |
| PE 17888–09 | PE | 10 | 11/2008 | – | 8 mo | – | No | Yes | Yes |
| PE 17890–09 | PE | 20 | 02/2008 | 05/2008 | 18 mo | – | No | No | Yes |
| PE 17891–09 | PE | 12 | – | – | – | – | No | Yes | Yes |
| MA18999–10 | MA | 18 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| MA 19006–10 | MA | 2 | 08/10 | – | 4 d | 1 | Yes | No | No |
| MA 19013–10 | MA | 10 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| MA 19015–10 | MA | 48 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| MA 19030–10 | MA | 32 | 03/2008 | – | 29 mo | 7 | Yes | No | No |
| BA19391–10 | BA | 2 | – | – | – | 2 | – | No | No |
*Prefixes represent origins of circulating strains in Brazil: ES, Espirito Santo; –, no data; SE, Sergipe; PE, Pernambuco; MA, Maranhão; BA, Bahia. †Age of child at time of fecal sample collection. ‡Number of days child had diarrhea before fecal sample collection.
RVA detection, genotyping, and sequencing were performed (
Strains analyzed belonged to the Wa-like genogroup (genotype 1); 26 strains showed a G1–P[8]–I1–R1–C1–M1–A1–N1–T1–E1–H1 genome constellation. One sample, collected from a child vaccinated with 1 dose during 2010 in Maranhão (MA) state (MA19030–10), contained the G1–P[8]–Ix–R1–Cx–M1–A1–N1–T3–E1–H1 constellation.
Nucleotide (nt) identity values between circulating strains in Brazil and the Rotarix strain ranged 76%–100% (
| Protein encoded by genes† | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strain names‡ | Genotype constellation | VP7 | VP4 | VP6 | VP1 | VP2 | VP3 | NSP1 | NSP2 | NSP3 | NSP4 | NSP5 |
| SE15901–09 | Vaccine | G1 100% | P[8] 100% | I1 100% | R1 100% | C1 100% | M1 100% | A1 100% | N1 100% | T1 100% | E1 100% | H1 100% |
| MA19006–10 | Vaccine | G1 100% | P[8] 99% | I1 99% | R1 99% | C1 98% | M1 99% | A1 98% | N1 100% | T1 100% | E1 99% | H1 98% |
| BA19391–10 | Vaccine | G1 100% | P[8] 99% | I1 100% | R1 99% | C1 98% | M1 100% | A1 100% | N1 100% | T1 100% | E1 99,6% | H1 100% |
| ES15221–08 | Wa-like (ES) | G1 94% | P[8] 90% | I1 90% | R1 100% | C1 90% | M1 93% | A1 92% | N1 91% | T1 97% | E1 92% | H1 92% |
| SE16800–09 | Wa-like (SE) | G1 94% | P[8] 92% | I1 89% | R1 97% | C1 90% | M1 96% | A1 92% | N1 88% | T1 98% | E1 98% | H1 92% |
| PE17888–09 | Wa-like (PE) | G1 94% | P[8] 92% | I1 90% | R1 94% | C1 91% | M1 93% | A1 93% | N1 90% | T1 97% | E1 94% | H1 93% |
| MA19013–10 | Wa-like (MA) | G1 95% | P[8] 93% | I1 92% | R1 95% | C1 92% | M1 95% | A1 94% | N1 92% | T1 97% | E1 94% | H1 93% |
| MA19030–10 | Wa/AU-1 reassortant | G1 93% | P[8] 91% | X | R1 93% | X | M1 94% | A1 93% | N1 89% | T3 76% | E1 92% | H1 93% |
| Wa | Wa-like | G1 | P[8] | I1 | R1 | C1 | M1 | A1 | N1 | T1 | E1 | H1 |
| DS-1 | DS-1-like | G2 | P[4] | I2 | R2 | C2 | M2 | A2 | N2 | T2 | E2 | H2 |
| AK26 | Wa/DS-1 reassortant | G2 | P[4] | I2 | R2 | C2 | M2 | A2 | N1 | T2 | E2 | H2 |
| 6809 | Wa/DS-1 reassortant | G8 | P[6] | I2 | R1 | C1 | M1 | A1 | N1 | T1 | E1 | H1 |
| Matlab13 | Wa/DS-1 reassortant | G12 | P[6 | I1 | R1 | C1 | M1 | A1 | T2 | T1 | E1 | H1 |
| Mani-253 | Wa/DS-1 reassortant | G4 | P[4] | I1 | R1 | C1 | M2 | A8 | N1 | T1 | E1 | H1 |
| AU-1 | AU-1-like | G3 | P[9] | I3 | R3 | C3 | M3 | A3 | N3 | T3 | E3 | H3 |
| T152 | AU-1-like | G12 | P[9] | I3 | R3 | C3 | M3 | A12 | N3 | T3 | E3 | H6 |
| K8 | Wa/AU-1 reassortant | G1 | P[9] | I1 | R3 | C3 | M3 | A1 | N1 | T3 | E3 | H3 |
| Mani-265 | DS-1/AU-1 reassortant | G10 | P[6] | I2 | R2 | C2 | M2 | A3 | N2 | T7 | E2 | H2 |
*Wa-like, DS-1-like, AU-like genotypes are shown in green, red, and orange, respectively, and the P[6] genotype is shown in blue; X, indeterminate genotypes; –, no data. †One sample for each group was chosen as representative and the average was shown. ‡Prefixes represent origins of circulating strains in Brazil: SE, Sergipe; BA, Bahia; MA, Maranhão; ES, Espirito Santo; PE, Pernambuco.
In phylogenetic analysis of 11 genes, 10 genes clustered into 5 clades. In the remaining gene, NSP5, the circulating strains clustered into 4 groups (
Phylogenetic analysis of nucleotide sequence of A) nonstructural protein 1 [NSP1], B) NSP2, C), NSP3, D) NSP4, and E) NSP5 encoding genes of G1P[8] RVA samples collected in Brazil and described in this study. Filled circles indicate samples from non-vaccinated children and filled triangles vaccinated children. The Rotarix strain is indicated by a filled diamond. Bootstrap values >70%, estimated with 2,000 pseudoreplicate datasets, are indicated at each node. Only the genotype in which the strains under investigation cluster is shown completely; 1 prototype from another genotype has been added as an outgroup. Scale bars represent 0.5 substitutions per nucleotide site.
Strain ES15221–08, detected in an unvaccinated child, is genetically distinct and differs in origin from other G1P[8] circulating strains (
Phylogenetic analysis of nucleotide sequence of (A) VP1, (B) VP2, (C), VP3, (D) VP4, (E) VP6 and (F) VP7 genes of G1P[8] RVA samples collected in Brazil and described in this study. Filled circles indicate samples from non-vaccinated children and filled triangles vaccinated children. The Rotarix vaccine strain is indicated by a filled diamond. Bootstrap values above 70%, estimated with 2,000 pseudoreplicate datasets, are indicated at each node. Only the genotype in which the strains under investigation cluster is shown completely and one prototype from another genotype has been added as outgroup. Scale bars represent 0.5 substitutions per nucleotide site.
Strain MA19030–10, detected in a child after 1 vaccine dose, was closely related to the MA group, but the NSP2 segment differed in origin from other MA samples (
NSP2 and NSP3 genes from sample MA19030–10 and NSP5 genes from sample MA19006–10 differed from each other and from those of their respective clusters. Samples MA19006–10 and MA19030–10 are genetically distinct and might have distinct evolutionary histories. Studies that included this genogrouping system were performed to prove the existence of inter-genogroup reassortment between human RVA genogroups or human and animal genogroups. The existence and effectiveness of heterogeneous genome constellations remains unclear, probably because it is caused by mechanisms that create protein sets that work better when kept together (
Phylogenetic analysis of the VP8* (aa 1–247) portion of VP4 encoding gene showed circulating strains (
Two VP7 lineages (G1-I and G1-II) were identified. Samples closely related to the Rotarix strain belonged to G1-II; remaining strains belonged to G1-I. Comparing the regions defined as antigenic epitopes (7–1 and 7–2) for VP7 protein, we found
This report characterizes the complete genome of G1P[8] strains in Brazil. Phylogenetic analysis showed that sequences clustered consistently with the region of sample collection. Three strains circulating in Brazil were closely related to those in Rotarix; 1 of the 3 was 100% identical to Rotarix, likely representing shedding of this vaccine. Sequence analysis confirmed the presence of the Rotarix VP1–derived segment in 1 sample (ES15221–08), indicating an unreported reassortment event between the vaccine and a community strain.
The backbone of MA19030–10 sample was Wa-like, but the NSP3 segment exhibited a T3 genotype that was described for the AU-1 genogroup. This finding suggests that this strain derived its NSP3 gene from an AU-1-like strain through reassortment.
Changes in antigenic regions of VP4 and VP7 proteins have been associated with mutated RVA strains that spread (
Considering the segmented RVA genome and that the Rotarix vaccine is an attenuated RVA human strain, it is expected that reassortants will arise and circulate among humans. The effects of such events are not known. This study described strains that originated from reassortment events between the Rotarix vaccine strain and strains detected in vaccinated and unvaccinated children. Improvement of RVA surveillance programs that include full genome sequencing analysis will strengthen the understanding of how vaccines will affect the RVAs circulating among humans, and how those events could affect the use of live vaccines, the frequency of RVA intra- and intergenogroup reassortment events under natural conditions, and the stability of RVA generated by such events.
These authors contributed equally to this article.
The authors thank the PDTIS DNA Sequence Platform (RPT01A) and LATER/BioManguinhos, FIOCRUZ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and the Secretary of Public Health State of Sergipe, Maranhão, Espírito Santo, Bahia and Pernambuco. We also thank Alexandre Madi Fialho and Rosane Maria Santos de Assis for technical assistance.
This research was supported by federal funds from the Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES), the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), project PAPES VI/Fiocruz - CNPq, Oswaldo Cruz Institute (PROEP – Fiocruz - CNPq), the General Coordination of Public Health Laboratories – Secretary of Health Surveillance (CGLAB/SVS), project CAPES-MERCOSUL PPCP 023/2011, and Carlos Chagas Filho Foundation for Research Support of Rio de Janeiro State (FAPERJ). T.L.R. receives a post-doctoral scholarship from CNPq.
Dr Rose is a post-doctoral student at the Laboratory of Comparative and Environmental Virology, Oswaldo Cruz Institute, Fiocruz, Brazil. Her research interests include RVA molecular epidemiology.