Centre for Infectious Diseases, University of Edinburgh, Summerhall, Edinburgh EH9 1QH, United Kingdom.
J Clin Microbiol. 2009 Dec;47(12):3958-67. doi: 10.1128/JCM.00993-09. Epub 2009 Oct 14.
Rhinovirus infections are the most common cause of viral illness in humans, and there is increasing evidence of their etiological role in severe acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs). Human rhinoviruses (HRVs) are classified into two species, species A and B, which contain over 100 serotypes, and a recently discovered genetically heterogeneous third species (HRV species C). To investigate their diversity and population turnover, screening for the detection and the genetic characterization of HRV variants in diagnostic respiratory samples was performed by using nested primers for the efficient amplification of the VP4-VP2 region of HRV (and enterovirus) species and serotype identification. HRV species A, B, and C variants were detected in 14%, 1.8%, and 6.8%, respectively, of 456 diagnostic respiratory samples from 345 subjects (6 samples also contained enteroviruses), predominantly among children under age 10 years. HRV species A and B variants were remarkably heterogeneous, with 22 and 6 different serotypes, respectively, detected among 73 positive samples. Similarly, by using a pairwise distance threshold of 0.1, species C variants occurring worldwide were provisionally assigned to 47 different types, of which 15 were present among samples from Edinburgh, United Kingdom. There was a rapid turnover of variants, with only 5 of 43 serotypes detected during both sampling periods. By using divergence thresholds and phylogenetic analysis, several species A and C variants could provisionally be assigned to new types. An initial investigation of the clinical differences between rhinovirus species found HRV species C to be nearly twice as frequently associated with ARTIs than other rhinovirus species, which matches the frequencies of detection of respiratory syncytial virus. The study demonstrates the extraordinary genetic diversity of HRVs, their rapid population turnover, and their extensive involvement in childhood respiratory disease.
鼻病毒感染是人类最常见的病毒性疾病病因,越来越多的证据表明它们在严重急性呼吸道感染(ARTI)中的病因作用。人类鼻病毒(HRV)分为两个种,种 A 和种 B,其中包含超过 100 种血清型,最近发现了第三种具有遗传异质性的病毒(HRV 种 C)。为了研究其多样性和群体更替,通过使用嵌套引物对 HRV(和肠道病毒)种的 VP4-VP2 区进行高效扩增和血清型鉴定,对诊断性呼吸道样本中 HRV 变异株的检测和遗传特征进行了筛查。在 345 例患者的 456 份诊断性呼吸道样本中,分别检测到 HRV 种 A、B 和 C 变异株的比例为 14%、1.8%和 6.8%(6 份样本还含有肠道病毒),主要发生在 10 岁以下的儿童中。HRV 种 A 和 B 变异株明显具有异质性,在 73 份阳性样本中分别检测到 22 种和 6 种不同的血清型。同样,通过使用 0.1 的成对距离阈值,在全世界范围内发生的 HRV 种 C 变异株被临时分配到 47 种不同的类型,其中 15 种存在于英国爱丁堡的样本中。变异株更替迅速,仅在两个采样期间检测到 43 种血清型中的 5 种。通过使用分歧阈值和系统发育分析,可临时将几种种 A 和 C 变异株分配到新的类型。对鼻病毒种之间临床差异的初步研究发现,HRV 种 C 与其他鼻病毒种相比,与 ARTIs 的关联频率几乎高出两倍,与呼吸道合胞病毒的检出频率相匹配。该研究表明 HRV 具有非凡的遗传多样性、快速的种群更替以及在儿童呼吸道疾病中的广泛参与。