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1.
The evolution of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is marked by the expanded nosological area, the transformation of landscapes, the formation of anthropurgic foci, the change of environmental systems, the increase of mortality rate mainly among urban dwellers, as well as pathomorphism. The evolution of natural TBE virus (TBEV) populations was studied in Eastern and Western Siberia, Middle Urals, and the European part of the nosological area. The paper first describes the types of evolutionary transformations of viral populations under the conditions of a varying environmental and epidemiological situation. These include: 1) the change of TBEV subtypes over 50-60 years; substitution of the Far-Eastern subtype for its Siberian subtype (the Sverdlovsk and Kemerovo regions); 2) the steady-state circulation of one Siberian subtype with mutanttypes being accumulated (the Vologda region); 3) co-existence of the Far-Eastern and Siberian subtypes with the common vector Ixodes persulcatus (the Yaroslavl and Irkutsk regions, etc.); 4) original mixed TBEV strains including the gene sites of proteins E and NSI of two subtypes. There is new evidence that the Siberian subtype is able to induce focal TBE forms, leading to death.  相似文献   

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3.
There has been an emergence of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) cases in western Sweden over the past 10 years. Human cases cluster in distinct regions around major bodies of water, raising the question of TBE prevalence in ticks within these defined localities. This study was based on a collection of 7120 questing nymphs, 510 questing adults, and 132 fed female ticks from cows in 4 suspected TBE foci, based on human cases, and 2 non-endemic areas of western Gotaland. All tick pools were screened with Real-Time RT-PCR targeting the non-coding 3′-region. Prevalence in ticks in the endemic areas ranged from 0.1% to 0.42%, which is comparable with other more established TBE endemic regions in Europe. Of the 18 positive pools, viral copy numbers ranged from 500 to 3.7×109 copies/pool. Sequence data from a TBE patient in western Gotaland confirmed that the western European subtype of TBEV has spread to western Sweden.  相似文献   

4.
In Lithuania, 171-645 serologically confirmed cases of tick-borne encephalitis occurred annually [Mickiene et al. (2001): Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis 20:886-888] in 1993-1999, and the tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) seroprevalence in the general population was found previously to be 3.0% [Juceviciene et al. (2002): J Clin Virol 25:23-27]. To assess the risk for TBEV virus infection in Lithuania and to characterize the agent a panel of 3,234 ticks combined into 436 pools [Juceviciene et al., 2005] were tested for presence of TBEV RNA by a nested RT-PCR targeting at the NS5 gene. Six pools were confirmed positive and the prevalence of the infected ticks was 0.2% (if one tick per pool [Juceviciene et al., 2005] was considered positive) and the proportion of positive tick pools was 1.4%. The prevalence of the infected ticks in the Panevezys, Siauliai, and Radviliskis regions (in central Lithuania) was 0.1%, 0.4%, and 1.7% corresponding with a higher TBE disease burden in these regions. The 252-nucleotide NS5-region amplicons, and a longer sequence (737 nucleotides) obtained from one sample from the PrM-E gene region, were sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis of the latter showed that all western type TBEV PrM-E sequences, including the Lithuanian strains, were monophyletic, showed no clustering and had very little variation. The NS5 sequences, although identical within one locality, did not show any mutations common to strains from the two Lithuanian regions, nor could any geographical clustering be found among western type TBEV strains from other areas.  相似文献   

5.
Viruses of the tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) antigenic complex within the family Flaviviridae cause a variety of diseases, including uncomplicated febrile illness, meningoencephalitis, and hemorrhagic fever. Different domesticated animals or wildlife species often act as reservoir hosts and ixodid ticks serve as vectors. Although TBE is a serious problem in Latvia, the knowledge concerning TBE virus (TBEV) strains circulating in the country is most limited. Only two strains (Latvia-1-96 isolated from a TBE patient, and RK1424 originating from an Ixodes persulcatus tick), which belonged to the Siberian and the Far Eastern subtypes of TBEV, respectively, have previously been characterized. In the present study, we concentrated on the western and central regions of Latvia, with predominantly Ixodes ricinus ticks. Five virus strains were isolated from serum samples of patients with clinical symptoms of an acute TBE infection. Nucleotide sequences encoding the envelope (E) protein of TBEV, which were recovered from the five TBEV isolates, showed the highest level of identity to the corresponding sequences of the prototype strain Neudoerfl and other European strains of the Western TBEV subtype characterized previously. Accordingly, phylogenetic analysis placed the new Latvian isolates within the Western genetic lineage of TBEV. Taken together with earlier observations, the results proved that all three TBEV subtypes are co-circulating in Latvia and indicated that the genetic diversity of TBEV within certain geographical areas is much more complex than previously believed.  相似文献   

6.
Among diseases transmitted by ticks in the Czech Republic, tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) caused by Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) and Lyme disease caused by Borrelia burgdorferi spirochete are most important. We propose an effective and specific test for detection of TBEV in a single tick or a pool of ticks based on the detection of TBEV RNA using an RT-PCR technique without RNA purification. The method is very sensitive with the detection limit of about 14 fg TBEV RNA in total RNA obtained from brain suspension from suckling mice infected with TBEV per reaction. The primers were derived from the 5'-terminal non-coding region, a highly conserved part of the virus. The method was successfully applied to field-collected ticks in detecting TBEV RNA. This method can be used in studies of several aspects of TBEV: epidemiology, screening of natural foci, circulation and detection of virus genome sequences in clinical materials.  相似文献   

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8.
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is a severe problem in Lithuania, indicated by the 171 to 645 serologically confirmed cases that occurred each year between 1993 and 1999. In the present report, the first isolation and partial genetic analysis of a Lithuanian TBE virus (TBEV) strain isolated from a patient's serum sample is described. The patient was bitten by a tick while visiting the Lazdijai district (Veisiejai forest) in the southernmost part of Lithuania, a geographical area where Ixodes ricinus but not Ixodes persulcatus ticks are known to be present. The E protein-encoding viral gene sequence (nt 74–1273) recovered from the TBEV isolate showed the closest similarity to previously characterized European strains of the Western TBEV subtype, including the prototype TBEV strain Neudoerfl and those from neighbouring Latvia. Accordingly, the Lithuanian isolate was placed within the Western genetic lineage of TBEV in phylogenetic trees. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

9.
Flaviviruses from a tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) complex circulate in about all the countries widely distributed in Northern Eurasia. Complete nucleotide sequences for genomes of different 15 tick-borne encephalitis viruses have been determined in the past years. Phylogenetic analyses of these sequences showed their significant genetic variability. Thus, the genetic differences in the genomes of TBEV strains are as high as 17.3%, but the differences in the amino acid sequences are 9%. These genetic differences permit determination of the time of divergence of the current TBEV genovariants from the common viral precursor in 1700 to 2100. Novel genetic variants of the Far-Eastern TBEV subtype, which are represented by Senzhang and Glubinnoe/2004 viruses, have been discovered in the pastyears. New variants of the same Far-Eastern subtype of TBEV, which are able to induce hemorrhagic tick-borne encephalitis, have been found in Western Siberia. The fact that there are considerable genetic differences in Turkish and Spanish sheep encephalitis viruses has been established within the European subtype of TBEV. The Siberian subtype of TBEV is genetically more uniform; however co-circulation of the Far-Eastern and Siberian subtypes of TBEV has been found in the natural TBEV foci of Siberia. This suggests that there may be at present a change in the genotypes of TBEV in different geographical regions.  相似文献   

10.
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is recognized as the most important viral tick-borne zoonosis in 27 countries in Europe. In this study, ticks were collected in Germany from two non-risk areas in the states of Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, where several single human TBE cases have occurred in recent years. Ticks were also collected from a region in Thuringia, known to be a former risk area for TBE virus (TBEV), where numerous human cases were reported between 1960 and 1975. Detection of TBEV RNA was conducted by real-time RT-PCR. No TBEV was detected in any field-collected ticks. However, ticks were also collected from volunteers living in Bavaria. Three of 239 ticks from this collection were positive for TBEV genome and two genetically distinct TBEV strains were detected and characterized.  相似文献   

11.
Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) is a severe problem in Estonia. In the present article the first genetic analysis of Estonian TBEV strains is described. In total, seven TBEV strains were isolated from ticks (Ixodes ricinus and I. persulcaus), rodents (Apodemus agrarius and Cletrionomys glareolus), and serum from a tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) patient. The nucleic acid sequences of the viral genome encoding almost the complete E protein (nt 41-1250) and the 3'-NCR-termini of the Estonian TBEV strains were determined by direct sequencing of RT-PCR products. The results showed that all three known TBEV subtypes, Western TBEV (W-TBEV), Far-Eastern TBEV (FE-TBEV), and Siberian TBEV (S-TBEV), co-circulate in Estonia. The Estonian TBEV strains of the S-TBEV and W-TBEV subtypes clustered with the previously reported strains from Latvia and Lithuania. Within the FE-TBEV subtype, however, the Estonian strain Est2546 clustered together with the strain Sofjin, originating from the Far-East of Russia, but not with the strain RK1424, isolated in the neighboring Latvia. This suggests a different evolutionary history for the Estonian and the Latvian strains in the FE-TBEV subtype. The Estonian TBEV strain (Est3535), which belonged to the S-TBEV subtype, had an organization of the 3'-NCR similar to that of strains from the Far-East of Russia (Irkutsk). The 3'-NCRs of Estonian strains of the W-TBEV subtype (Est3051, Est3053, Est3476, and Est3509) were very similar to those of the strain Ljubljana I from the Balkans. In the 3'-NCR sequence of the Estonian strain Est2546, which belonged to the FE-TBEV subtype, a deletion from position 10461 to 10810 extending approximately 10 nucleotides into the core element, was detected.  相似文献   

12.
Tick‐borne encephalitis (TBE) is the most important viral tick‐borne disease in Europe and can cause severe disease in humans. In Norway, human cases have been reported only from the southern coast. The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of tick‐borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) in questing Ixodes ricinus ticks from the north‐western part of Norway. A total of 4509 ticks were collected by flagging in May and June 2014. A subpopulation of 2220 nymphs and 162 adult ticks were analysed by real‐time PCR and positive samples were confirmed by pyrosequencing. The estimated prevalence of TBEV was 3.08% among adult ticks from Sekken in Møre og Romsdal County and 0.41% among nymphs from both Hitra and Frøya in Sør‐Trøndelag County. This study indicates that TBEV might be more widespread than the distribution of reported human cases suggests.  相似文献   

13.
Eighteen polytypic tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) strains containing the fragments of E and NS1 protein genes of Siberian and Far Eastern, occasionally Siberian and European subtypes were isolated in the European and Asian parts of the tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) area. They were identified using real-time polymerase chain reaction, hybridization-fluorescence detection with genotype-specific probes, restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, and E protein sequencing. The polytypic strains were isolated from individual Ixodes persulcatus ticks, their pools, from the blood of patients and the brain of dead patients. The isolation rates of the polytypic strains in the sympathry area of different TBEV subtypes ranged from 4.4% (the Irkutsk Region) to 15.1% (the Yaroslavl Region). In addition to 2 polytypic strains, a strain similar to the TBEV 886-84 strain was isolated. The TBEV subtypes entering into the composition of the polytypic strains show nongenetic interactions, such as neutral replication or competition. The polytypic strains are stable during passages in the cultured pig embryo kidney epithelial cells and on cloning. Mouse brain passage promotes dissociation of polytypic strains. The conditions for the formation of polytypic strains and their role in the etiology of TBE are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The Siberian subtype of the virus of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE), which is predominant in Russia, constantly circulated in its eastern European regions in 1943-2003 and in the Urals and West and East Siberia in 1960-2003. This subtype is transmitted by two types of ticks: Ixodes persulcatus and I. ricinis. Changes were not found in the structure of viral populations at the peak and drop of the incidence of TBE. There was new evidence on the genetic heterogenicity of the Siberian subtype: in addition to the strains containing histidine (H) or glutamine (Q) in the position of 234 of protein E gene, there were strains having tyrosine (V). There were differences in the eastern European and Asian populations of the Siberian subtype. The strains with labeled amino acids of H and Q amounted to 87.1 and 3.2% in the eastern European population and 60 and 40% in the Asian population, respectively. The eastern European strains with labeled amino acid of H differed from the same Asian strains in the level of nucleotide replacements in the studied E gene fragment. The strains containing tyrosine in position 234 were found only in the eastern European population. Sixty-two cases of TBE were analyzed, which showed a significantly established role of a certain subtype. The Siberian and Far Eastern subtypes in the area of joint circulation were found to cause the whole spectrum of infection manifestations from unapparent to severe focal forms with a fatal outcome. There were no differences in the location of the virus and the topography of CNS morphological changes in patients who had died after infection with the Siberian or Far Eastern subtypes of the virus of TBE. The chronic forms of TBE are mainly associated with the Siberian subtype. These three subtypes (European, Far Eastern, and Siberian) may cause the disease via unpasteurized milk.  相似文献   

15.
Agar gel precipitation test with cross-adsorbed immune sera was used for the antigenic differentiation of strains of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV). Fifty strains of the Far East TBEV serotype and 46 strains of the Siberian (Aina) TBEV serotype were isolated from Ixodes persulcatus, which is the main vector of the above TBEV subtypes in the Asian and European parts of Russia. The fragment of the envelope protein gene was sequenced for TBEV strains. Sequences of new-group strains of the Siberian subtypes isolated from 3 patients with chronic TBE and from brain tissues of 4 deceased patients were determined. Lethal TBE outcomes were registered in Siberia (Irkutsk Region and Krasnoyarsk Territory) and in Russia's European part (Yaroslavl Region).  相似文献   

16.
Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) strains were isolated from ticks in Western Siberia for 12 years. Molecular hybridization of the 46 viral RNA with the TBEV cDNA and oligonucleotide probes revealed differences between the Siberian and Far Eastern strains. A comparison of the viral E gene fragment nucleotide sequence showed 89–98% homology between Siberian TBEV strains, whereas their similarity with strains from other populations was less than 83%. However, the viral E and NS1 glycoprotein antigenic structures appeared to be conservative because of the degenerate genetic code. This was shown by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with the corresponding monoclonal antibodies (MAb). The single exception was the MAb 17C3 against nonstructural glycoprotein NS1, which could distinguish Siberian from Far Eastern strains. Moreover, the neurovirulence differed between strains from the two natural populations. Lower neuroinvasiveness of the Siberian strains in comparison with Far Eastern Sofyin strain might be caused by both E and NS1 glycoprotein mutations.  相似文献   

17.
Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) causes one of the most important inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system, namely severe encephalitis in Europe and Asia. Since the 1980s tick-borne encephalitis is known in Mongolia with increasing numbers of human cases reported during the last years. So far, however, data on TBEV strains are still sparse. We herein report the isolation of a TBEV strain from Ixodes persulcatus ticks collected in Mongolia in 2010. Phylogenetic analysis of the E-gene classified this isolate as Siberian subtype of TBEV. The Mongolian TBEV strain showed differences in virus titers, plaque sizes, and growth properties in two human neuronal cell-lines. In addition, the 10,242 nucleotide long open-reading frame and the corresponding polyprotein sequence were revealed. The isolate grouped in the genetic subclade of the Siberian subtype. The strain Zausaev (AF527415) and Vasilchenko (AF069066) had 97 and 94?% identity on the nucleotide level. In summary, we herein describe first detailed data regarding TBEV from Mongolia. Further investigations of TBEV in Mongolia and adjacent areas are needed to understand the intricate dispersal of this virus.  相似文献   

18.
Approximately 20 cases of tick‐borne encephalitis (TBE) occur annually in Finland. The known endemic areas are situated mainly in the archipelago and coastal regions of Finland, with highest incidence in Åland islands. Ixodes ricinus panels collected in 1996–1997 from two endemic areas were screened for the presence of RNA. Two distinct RT‐PCR methods were applied, and were shown to have an approximate detection limit of 10 focus forming doses (FFD)/100 μl. One out of 20 pools (a total of 139 ticks) from Helsinki Isosaari Island and one out of 48 pools (a total of 450 ticks) from Åland were positive with both methods, whereas the remaining pools were negative. The observed overall frequency (0.34%) in ticks in endemic areas of Finland, was similar to the low incidence found by virus isolation in mice in the 1960s (0.5%). Viral RNA was detectable in a diluted sample representing 0.005% of a positive pool of ten nymphs suggesting that the viral RNA load within an infected tick pool was approximately equivalent to 20,000–200,000 FFD. Sequence analysis did not show geographical clustering of the Finnish strains, suggesting an independent emergence of different TBE foci from the south. TBE virus RNA positive ticks were not found in I. ricinus panels consisting of 130 pools (726 ticks) from Helsinki city parks or 41 pools (197 ticks) from Võrmsi Island in Estonia. J. Med. Virol. 64:21–28, 2001. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Yun SM  Kim SY  Ju YR  Han MG  Jeong YE  Ryou J 《Virus genes》2011,42(3):307-316
We determined for the first time the complete genome sequences of two Korean strains of the tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV), designated KrM 93 and KrM 213, isolated from the lung tissues of wild rodents in 2006. The genomes are 11,097 nucleotides (nt) in length and consist of a 132 nt 5′-noncoding region (NCR), a 10,245 nt open reading frame (ORF) containing 10 viral protein-coding regions (3,415 amino acids), and a 720 nt 3′-NCR. Compared with the 31 fully sequenced TBEV strains currently available, KrM 93 and KrM 213 show genomic nucleotide (and deduced amino acid) sequence divergences ranging from 1.8 (0.7) to 19.2 (26.6)% and 1.9 (0.8) to 19.3 (26.7)%, respectively. Phylogenetic and recombination analyses based on the complete genome sequence were performed to identify genetic variations and relationships between the TBEV strains. These showed that the Korean TBEV strains clustered with the Western subtype rather than with Far-Eastern or Siberian subtypes, and phylogenetic trees derived from capsid (C), envelope (E), nonstructural (NS) 4B and NS5 regions represented the same branching pattern shown by the complete genome-based tree. Although no recombination events were identified in these two Korean strains, 11 putative recombination events were identified within the NS5 regions or in the 3′-NCRs of TBEV strains in general. The results provide insight into the genetics of TBEV strains to understand the molecular epidemiology, genetic diversity, and evolution of TBEV.  相似文献   

20.
BackgroundIn many European countries (including Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Russia) two subtypes of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) occur with overlapping geographic distribution yet with apparently different severity and persistence of symptoms. However, it has not usually been possible to distinguish these infections in the laboratory, as TBEV RNA or sequences have rarely been retrieved from patients seeking medical care in the second phase of infection when the neurological symptoms occur, and serological tests have so far not been able to discriminate between the subtype-specific responses.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to assess the applicability of a μ-capture enzyme immunoassay (EIA) based on TBEV prME subviral particles produced in mammalian cells from Semliki-Forest virus replicons (SFV-prME EIA) to distinguish reactivity to European and Siberian strains of TBEV.Study designAltogether 54 TBEV IgM positive acute human serum samples and 6 positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from different regions of Finland were tested in EIA with subtype-specific antigens and TBEV-IgM subtype-specific index ratios were determined.ResultsAll 30 samples from patients whose transmission had occurred in foci where only Siberian subtype of TBEV is occurring had an index ratio of more than 1.8, whereas all 30 acute TBE samples from an area where only European subtype circulates had an index ratio below 1.5.ConclusionsWe conclude that the assay is a useful tool to distinguish between acute infections of European and Siberian strains of TBEV, and should help in further studies of the clinical outcome of these two subtypes.  相似文献   

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