Abstract

Enteroviruses (EVs) are among the most common viruses infecting humans worldwide but only a few Non-Polio Enterovirus (NPEV) isolates have been characterized in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo). Moreover, circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses (PVs) [cVDPVs] isolated during multiple outbreaks in DR Congo from 2004 to 2018 have been characterized so far only by the sequences of their VP1 capsid coding gene. This study was carried to i) investigate the circulation and genetic diversity of NPEV and polio vaccine isolates recovered from healthy children and Acute Flaccid Paralysis (AFP) patients, ii) evaluate the occurrence of genetic recombination among EVs belonging to the Enterovirus C species (including PVs) and iii) identify the virological factors favoring multiple emergences of cVDPVs in DR Congo. The biological material considered in this study included i) a collection of 91 Sabin-like PVs, 54 cVDPVs and 150 NPEVs isolated from AFP patients between 2008 and 2012 in DR Congo and iii) a collection of 330 stool specimens collected from healthy children in 2013 in the Kasai Oriental and Maniema provinces of DR Congo. Studied virus isolates were sequenced in four distinct sub-genomic regions 5’-UTR, VP1, 2CATPase and 3Dpol. Resulting sequences were compared through comparative phylogenetic analyses. Virus isolation showed that 19.1% (63/330) healthy children were infected by EVs including 17.9% (59/330) of NPEVs and 1.2% (4/330) of type 3 Sabin-like PVs. Only one EV-C type, EV-C99 was identified among the NPEV collection from AFP patients whereas 27.5% of the 69 NPEV isolates typed in healthy children belonged to the EV-C species: CV-A13 (13/69), A20 (5/69) and A17 (1/69). Interestingly, 50 of the 54 cVDPVs featured recombinant genomes containing exogenous sequences in at least one of the targeted non-structural regions of their genomes: 5’UTR, 2CATPase and 3Dpol. Some of these non-vaccine sequences of the recombinant cVDPVs were strikingly related to homologous sequences from co-circulating CV-A17 and A20 in the 2CATPase region as well as to those from co-circulating CV-A13, A17 and A20 in the 3Dpol region. This study provided the first evidence uncovering CV-A20 strains as major recombination partners of PVs. High quality AFP surveillance, sensitive environmental surveillance and efficient vaccination activities remain essential to ensure timely detection and efficient response to recombinant cVDPVs outbreaks in DR Congo. Such needs are valid for any epidemiological setting where high frequency and genetic diversity of Coxsackieviruses A13, A17 and A20 provide a conducive viral ecosystem for the emergence of virulent recombinant cVDPVs.

Highlights

  • Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) is a clinical syndrome induced in humans by infectious agents, non-infectious causes or post-infectious autoimmune conditions [1, 2]

  • DR Congo have been repeatedly stricken by circulating vaccine-derived PVs (cVDPVs) associated poliomyelitis outbreaks and the largest one occurred between 2008 and 2012

  • This study showed no evidence of silent circulation of cVDPV among healthy children in 2013 in the previously affected Kasai Oriental and Maniema provinces of DR Congo

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Summary

Introduction

Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) is a clinical syndrome induced in humans by infectious agents (bacterial or viral), non-infectious causes (trauma, metal toxicity and metabolic disorders) or post-infectious autoimmune conditions (eg: Guillian Barre syndrome) [1, 2]. Enteroviruses (EVs) are members of the genus Enterovirus, family Picornaviridae. Based on their phylogenetic relationships, the (sero)types of EVs infecting humans are classified into 7 species, Enterovirus A to D (EV-A to -D) and Rhinovirus A to C (RV-A to -C). The most recognized severe EV-induced disease is paralytic poliomyelitis, caused by polioviruses (PVs). The Global Polio Eradication Initiative, based AFP surveillance and mass vaccination with live-attenuated PVs, has led to the reduction of the incidence of wild PV associated poliomyelitis from an estimated 350,000 cases in 1988 to only 22 cases in

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