Selected article for: "adaptation study and host virus"

Author: Liu, William J.; Shi, Weifeng; Zhu, Wuyang; Jin, Cong; Zou, Shumei; Wang, Ji; Ke, Yuehua; Li, Xiaofeng; Liu, Mi; Hu, Tao; Fan, Hang; Tong, Yigang; Zhao, Xiang; Chen, Wenbin; Zhao, Yuhui; Liu, Di; Wong, Gary; Chen, Chengchao; Geng, Chunyu; Xie, Weiwei; Jiang, Hui; Kamara, Idrissa Laybor; Kamara, Abdul; Lebby, Matt; Kargbo, Brima; Qiu, Xiangguo; Wang, Yu; Liang, Xiaofeng; Liang, Mifang; Dong, Xiaoping; Wu, Guizhen; Gao, George F.; Shu, Yuelong
Title: Intra-host Ebola viral adaption during human infection
  • Cord-id: 5gkdotvt
  • Document date: 2019_2_20
  • ID: 5gkdotvt
    Snippet: The onsite next generation sequencing (NGS) of Ebola virus (EBOV) genomes during the 2013–2016 Ebola epidemic in Western Africa provides an opportunity to trace the origin, transmission, and evolution of this virus. Herein, we have diagnosed a cohort of EBOV patients in Sierra Leone in 2015, during the late phase of the outbreak. The surviving EBOV patients had a recovery process characterized by decreasing viremia, fever, and biochemical parameters. EBOV genomes sequenced through the longitud
    Document: The onsite next generation sequencing (NGS) of Ebola virus (EBOV) genomes during the 2013–2016 Ebola epidemic in Western Africa provides an opportunity to trace the origin, transmission, and evolution of this virus. Herein, we have diagnosed a cohort of EBOV patients in Sierra Leone in 2015, during the late phase of the outbreak. The surviving EBOV patients had a recovery process characterized by decreasing viremia, fever, and biochemical parameters. EBOV genomes sequenced through the longitudinal blood samples of these patients showed dynamic intra-host substitutions of the virus during acute infection, including the previously described short stretches of 13 serial T>C mutations. Remarkably, within individual patients, samples collected during the early phase of infection possessed Ts at these nucleotide sites, whereas they were replaced by Cs in samples collected in the later phase, suggesting that these short stretches of T>C mutations could emerge independently. In addition, up to a total of 35 nucleotide sites spanning the EBOV genome were mutated coincidently. Our study showed the dynamic intra-host adaptation of EBOV during patient recovery and gave more insight into the complex EBOV-host interactions.

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