Robertson Mark, Eden John-Sebastian, Levy Avram, Carter Ian, Tulloch Rachel L, Cutmore Elena J, Horsburgh Bethany A, Sikazwe Chisha T, Dwyer Dominic E, Smith David W, Kok Jen
NSW Health Pathology-Institute for Clinical Pathology and Medical Research, NSW Health Pathology, Redbank Road, Westmead Hospital, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia.
Centre for Virus Research, Westmead Institute for Medical Research, 176 Hawkesbury Road, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia.
Virus Evol. 2021 Jul 22;7(2):veab068. doi: 10.1093/ve/veab068. eCollection 2021.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an important human respiratory pathogen. In temperate regions, a distinct seasonality is observed, where peaks of infections typically occur in early winter, often preceding the annual influenza season. Infections are associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality and in some populations exceed that of influenza. Two subtypes, RSV-A and RSV-B, have been described, and molecular epidemiological studies have shown that both viruses mostly co-circulate. This trend also appears to be the case for Australia; however, previous genomic studies have been limited to cases from one Eastern state-New South Wales. As such, the broader spatial patterns and viral traffic networks across the continent are not known. Here, we conducted a whole-genome study of RSV comparing strains across eastern and Western Australia during the period January 2016 to June 2017. In total, 96 new RSV genomes were sequenced, compiled with previously generated data, and examined using a phylodynamic approach. This analysis revealed that both RSV-A and RSV-B strains were circulating, and each subtype was dominated by a single genotype, RSV-A ON1-like and RSV-B BA10-like viruses. Some geographical clustering was evident in strains from both states with multiple distinct sub-lineages observed and relatively low mixing across jurisdictions, suggesting that endemic transmission was likely seeded from imported, unsampled locations. Overall, the RSV phylogenies reflected a complex pattern of interactions across multiple epidemiological scales from fluid virus traffic across global and regional networks to fine-scale local transmission events.
呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)是一种重要的人类呼吸道病原体。在温带地区,可观察到明显的季节性,感染高峰通常出现在初冬,往往先于每年的流感季节。感染与高发病率和死亡率相关,在某些人群中超过了流感。已描述了两种亚型,RSV-A和RSV-B,分子流行病学研究表明这两种病毒大多共同流行。澳大利亚似乎也是这种趋势;然而,以前的基因组研究仅限于来自一个东部州——新南威尔士州的病例。因此,整个大陆更广泛的空间格局和病毒传播网络尚不清楚。在此,我们对2016年1月至2017年6月期间澳大利亚东部和西部的RSV毒株进行了全基因组研究。总共对96个新的RSV基因组进行了测序,与之前生成的数据汇总,并采用系统发育动力学方法进行分析。该分析表明,RSV-A和RSV-B毒株均在传播,且每个亚型均由单一基因型主导,即RSV-A ON1样病毒和RSV-B BA10样病毒。两个州的毒株都有一些明显的地理聚集现象,观察到多个不同的亚谱系,不同司法管辖区之间的混合相对较少,这表明本地传播可能源于未采样的输入地点。总体而言,RSV系统发育反映了从全球和区域网络中的病毒流动到精细尺度的本地传播事件等多个流行病学尺度上的复杂相互作用模式。