Abstract

Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral infection that in recent decades has become a major international public health concern. Epidemic dengue fever reemerged in Brazil in 1981. Since 1990 more than one dengue virus serotype has been circulating in this tropical country and increasing rates of dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome have been detected every year. Some evidence supports the association between the introduction of a new serotype and/or genotype in a region and the appearance of dengue hemorrhagic fever. In order to study the evolutionary relationships and possible detection of the introduction of new dengue virus genotypes in Brazil in the last years, we analyzed partial nucleotide sequences of 52 Brazilian samples of both dengue type 1 and dengue type 2 isolated from 1988 to 2001 from highly endemic regions. A 240-nucleotide-long sequence from the envelope/nonstructural protein 1 gene junction was used for phylogenetic analysis. After comparing the nucleotide sequences originally obtained in this study to those previously studied by others, and analyzing the phylogenetic trees, we conclude that, after the initial introduction of the currently circulating dengue-1 and dengue-2 genotypes in Brazil, there has been no evidence of introduction of new genotypes since 1988. The increasing number of dengue hemorrhagic fever cases seen in Brazil in the last years is probably associated with secondary infections or with the introduction of new serotypes but not with the introduction of new genotypes.

Highlights

  • Dengue viruses belong to the Flaviviridae family and are transmitted to humans through the bite of female Aedes mosquitoes

  • We obtained and analyzed original partial nucleotide sequences from 16 strains of DEN-1 and nine strains of DEN-2 selected to represent the viruses circulating in all five Brazilian geographical regions

  • Brazilian DEN-1 strains segregated into one large group along with reference strains from the Americas and the Caribbean (Colombia, Surinam, El Salvador, Haiti, and Mexico), whereas Brazilian DEN-2 segregated into a group along with reference strains from the Americas and Southeast Asia (Jamaica, Thailand, and Vietnam)

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Summary

Introduction

Dengue viruses belong to the Flaviviridae family and are transmitted to humans through the bite of female Aedes mosquitoes. As the most important arthropod-borne viral infection of humans, dengue represents an important public health problem for urban population in the tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The dengue virus genome is an ~11-kb single-strand positive sense RNA with a single-open reading frame which encodes a polyprotein precursor of about 3,400 amino acid residues. Unlike other RNA viruses, some segments of the dengue virus genome have a high degree of stability where fixed mutations are common. Partial sequencing of some genomic regions has been successfully employed to determine the genetic variation of dengue viruses and to characterize genotypes within serotypes [6,7,8,9,10,11]

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