Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection has a tendency to be chronic. The quasi species of HBV in the pre-S/S gene and mutations in enhancer II (EnhII)/core promoter (CP)/pre-C of HBV were studied in asymptomatic carrier (AsC) mothers and their children with different virus loads, to gain a better understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms of HBV. Quasi species were analyzed using an established phylogenetic tree based on the sequences of the pre-S/S gene from 3 mother-child pairs. The mutations of EnhII/CP/pre-C were studied in 15 mother-child pairs. Substitution was the main mutation model. The phylogenetic tree indicated that the pre-S/S gene in every mother-child pair had the same root. The sequences of the pre-S/S gene of each patient were somewhat different from one another, but there was limited evolutionary distance between them. The evolutionary distances between the pre-S/S gene and the base of the tree in patients with low virus loads were greater than those in patients with high virus loads. The mutations in patients with low virus loads were much more frequent than those in patients with high virus loads and were not related to age, irrespective of whether the pre-S/S gene or EnhII/CP/pre-C was considered. There are HBV quasi species in the sera of AsCs, and the mutations are related to virus load and hepatitis B e antigen seroconversion, irrespective of age.
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