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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Cosavirus, Salivirus and Bufavirus in Diarrheal Tunisian Infants
Marie EstienneyMahjoub AouniSiwar AyouniMohamed Neji GuedichePierre PothierS. HammamiGaël BelliotAlexis De Rougemontsubject
0301 basic medicineRNA virusesMaleRotavirusViral DiseasesHuman astrovirusesIdentificationvirusesEnteric viruseslcsh:MedicinePolymerase chain-reactionArtificial Gene Amplification and ExtensionPicornaviridaemedicine.disease_causePathology and Laboratory MedicinePolymerase Chain ReactionPediatricsReverse-transcription-pcrlaw.inventionParvoviruslaw[SDV.MHEP.MI]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Infectious diseasesRotavirusMedicine and Health Scienceslcsh:ScienceChildrenPolymerase chain reactionPhylogenyMultidisciplinarybiologyTransmission (medicine)[ SDV.IDA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringPhylogenetic Analysis3. Good healthGastroenteritisInfectious DiseasesMedical MicrobiologyViral PathogensChild PreschoolViruses[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/VirologyFemalePathogensAichi virusPediatric InfectionsResearch ArticleDiarrheaTunisia030106 microbiologyGastroenterology and HepatologyResearch and Analysis MethodsMicrobiologyCalicivirusesAstrovirus03 medical and health sciencesKlassevirusParvovirusesAdeno-Associated VirusesmedicineHumansMolecular Biology TechniquesMolecular BiologyMicrobial PathogensRotavirus InfectionMolecular Biology Assays and Analysis TechniquesParvovirusNoroviruslcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesInfantSapovirusReverse Transcriptase-Polymerase Chain Reactionbiology.organism_classificationVirology030104 developmental biologyNoroviruslcsh:QDNA virusesdescription
International audience; Three newly discovered viruses have been recently described in diarrheal patients: Cosa-virus (CosV) and Salivirus (SalV), two picornaviruses, and Bufavirus (BuV), a parvovirus. The detection rate and the role of these viruses remain to be established in acute gastroen-teritis (AGE) in diarrheal Tunisian infants. From October 2010 through March 2012, stool samples were collected from 203 children <5 years-old suffering from AGE and attending the Children's Hospital in Monastir, Tunisia. All samples were screened for CosV, SalV and BuV as well as for norovirus (NoV) and group A rotavirus (RVA) by molecular biology. Positive samples for the three screened viruses were also tested for astrovirus, sapovirus, ade-novirus, and Aichi virus, then genotyped when technically feasible. During the study period, 11 (5.4%) samples were positive for one of the three investigated viruses: 2 (1.0%) CosV-A10, 7 (3.5%) SalV-A1 and 2 (1.0%) BuV-1, whereas 71 (35.0%) children were infected with NoV and 50 (24.6%) with RVA. No mixed infections involving the three viruses were found, but multiple infections with up to 4 classic enteric viruses were found in all cases. Although these viruses are suspected to be responsible for AGE in children, our data showed that this association was uncertain since all infected children also presented infections with several enteric viruses, suggesting here potential water-borne transmission. Therefore, further studies with large cohorts of healthy and diarrheal children will be needed to evaluate their clinical role in AGE.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-09-15 |