Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,598,486 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Recombinant vaccine-derived poliovirus in Madagascar. (Letters).


To the Editor: Between October 2001 and April 2002, five cases of acute flaccid paralysis associated with vaccine-derived poliovirus poliovirus /po·lio·vi·rus/ (pol´-e-o-vi?rus) the causative agent of poliomyelitis, separable, on the basis of specificity of neutralizing antibody, into three serotypes designated types 1, 2, and 3.  (VDPV) type 2 isolates were reported in the southern province of the Republic of Madagascar. The first patient, an 11-year-old child from the urban district of Toliara, first experienced paralysis on October 29, 2001. Three other children, 6, 9, and 14 months of age from Ebakika village, in a rural district of Taolagnaro (250 miles east of Toliara), showed signs of poliomyelitis poliomyelitis (pō'lēōmī'əlī`tĭs), polio, or infantile paralysis, acute viral infection, mainly of children but also affecting older persons.  between March 21 and March 26, 2002. The last case-patient, a 20-month-old child from Ambanihazo village (6 miles north of Ebakika), came into contact with one of the three case-patients in Ebakika in March 2002, and symptoms developed on April 12, 2002 (1). None of the patients had been fully vaccinated against poliomyelitis.

Nine type 2 poliovirus (PV) strains were isolated. A restriction fragment length polymorphism restriction fragment length polymorphism
n. Abbr. RFLP
Intraspecies variations in the length of DNA fragments generated by the action of restriction enzymes and caused by mutations that alter the sites at which these enzymes act, changing
 (RFLP RFLP
abbr.
restriction fragment length polymorphism



RFLP

restriction fragment length polymorphism.

RFLP 
) assay, with three different genomic regions amplified by reverse transcription--polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR RT-PCR

reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. See PCR1.
) and four different restriction enzymes (HinfI, DpnII, RsaI, and DdeI) were used to characterize the PV isolates at the molecular level (2). The RFLP profiles of all of the isolates in the two capsid capsid /cap·sid/ (kap´sid) the shell of protein that protects the nucleic acid of a virus; it is composed of structural units, or capsomers.

cap·sid
n.
 protein regions were identical to that of the type 2 strain of the oral polio vaccine (OPV OPV poliovirus vaccine live oral.

OPV
abbr.
oral poliovirus vaccine
) in the VP1-2A region (nucleotides 2,872 to 3,647) but slightly different in the VP3-VP1 region (nucleotides 1,915 to 2,883). The observed differences allowed us to distinguish two groups (isolates from Toliara and isolates from Taolagnaro) and two subgroups (isolates from March and isolates from April). The RFLP profiles of isolates in the noncapsid region, at the 3'-terminal end of the genome (polymerase 3D and 3' noncoding regions: nucleotides 6,535 to 7,439) also confirmed the presence of two separate groups. These last profiles were completely different from those of the three reference vaccine strains, suggesting recombination with other enteroviruses Enteroviruses
Viruses which live in the gastrointestinal tract. Coxsackie viruses, viruses that cause hand-foot-mouth disease, are an enterovirus.

Mentioned in: Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease
.

Partial genomic sequencing confirmed these observations. The entire VP1 region (903 nucleotides) of the type 2 PV strains from Toliara and Taolagnaro differed from the type 2 OPV strain by 1% and 2.5% nucleotides, respectively. This difference may indicate that the two strains had been multiplying or circulating for approximately 1 and 2.5 years, respectively. Taolagnaro strains are closely related to each other (<1% nucleotide difference) but appear to be very different from Toliara strains (2.9% nucleotide difference), indicating the existence of two genetic lineages. The sequencing of the noncapsid region (440 nucleotides corresponding to nucleotide positions 6,705 to 7,144 of the Sabin Sa·bin , Albert Bruce 1906-1993.

American microbiologist and physician who developed a live-virus vaccine against polio (1957), replacing the killed-virus vaccine invented by Jonas Salk.
 2 genome) confirms the existence of two lineages derived from different recombination events with two nonidentified enteroviruses of the phylogenetic cluster C. This cluster, based on sequence similarity, includes some coxsackieviruses and all PV strains (3).

We tried to identify the donor strains for sequences in the 3' terminal end of these recombinant strains by aligning the nonidentified sequences with homologous enterovirus enterovirus /en·tero·vi·rus/ (en´ter-o-vi?rus) any virus of the genus Enterovirus. enterovi´ral
Enterovirus /En·tero·vi·rus/ (en´ter-o-vi?rus 
 sequences available in a nucleotide sequence database (FASTA FASTA Fraternidad de Agrupaciones Santo Tomás de Aquino (Spanish: Fraternity of St Thomas Aquinas Groups )
FASTA Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act
FASTA Fresno Area Substitute Teachers Association
, version 3.3 applied to GenBank) (4). The highest percentages of nucleotide sequence identity were those with PVs and with most other cluster C enteroviruses available in the database (87% to 91% nucleotide identities). No wild PV strains have been isolated in Madagascar since 1997 despite surveillance and investigation of viral causes of acute flaccid paralysis cases (5). Thus, that the detected VDPVs were the product of recombination between OPV strains and two nonpolio enteroviruses is more likely than that they were the product of OPV strains and two different undetected wild PV strains. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that wild PVs were imported or circulating silently for a while.

In response to the outbreak, the local health authorities conducted house-to-house vaccination with OPV. Further field investigations were carried out to determine the extent to which VDPV had spread and to search actively for other cases. Data analysis is in progress.

As with the other epidemics in Egypt and Hispaniola, VDPV circulated in a province of Madagascar with low OPV coverage (6,7). Because a high OPV coverage rate helps prevent the circulation of both VDPVs and wild PVs, obtaining and maintaining high rates of immunization immunization: see immunity; vaccination.  coverage are essential (8). Moreover, two recombinant VDPV lineages in Madagascar indicate that recombination is frequent between OPV and cluster C enteroviruses. Similar recombinant VDPVs have been implicated in the epidemics in Hispaniola and in the Philippines (6,9). Determining whether the neurovirulence and transmissibility trans·mis·si·ble  
adj.
That can be transmitted: transmissible signals.



trans·mis
 of these VDPVs could be the result of the recombination with nonpolio enteroviruses is important. These VDPVs have major implications for the cessation of immunization with OPV after certification that wild PV has been eradicated.

Acknowledgments

We thank R. Crainic for support and encouragement, O. Kew for providing unpublished results; and E. de Gourville, O. Tomori, D. Wood, and F. Colbere-Garapin for their interest and advice.

References

(1.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. . Poliomyelitis--Madagascar 2002. MMWR MMWR Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report Epidemiology A news bulletin published by the CDC, which provides epidemiologic data–eg, statistics on the incidence of AIDS, rabies, rubella, STDs and other communicable diseases, causes of mortality–eg,  Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2002;51:622.

(2.) Guillot S, Caro V, Cuervo N, Korotkova E, Combiescu M, Persu A, et al.] Natural genetic exchanges between vaccine and wild poliovirus strains in humans. J Virol 2000;74:8434-43.

(3.) Pringle CR. Vires taxonomy at the XIth International Congress of Virology virology, study of viruses and their role in disease. Many viruses, such as animal RNA viruses and viruses that infect bacteria, or bacteriophages, have become useful laboratory tools in genetic studies and in work on the cellular metabolic control of gene expression , Sydney, Australia, 1999. Arch Virol 1999; 144:2065-70.

(4.) Pearson WR, Lipman DJ. Improved tools for biological sequence comparison. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1988;85:2444-8.

(5.) World Health Organization. Vaccines, immunization, and biologicals. Accessed May 13, 2003. Available from: URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
: http://www.who.int/vaccines/casecount/afpextractnew.cfm

(6.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Circulation of a type 2 vaccine-derived poliovirus--Egypt, 1982-1993. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2001; 50:41-2.

(7.) Kew O, Morris-Glasgow V, Landaverde M, Burns C, Shaw J, Garib Z, et al. Outbreak of poliomyelitis in Hispaniola associated with circulating type I vaccine-derived poliovirus. Science 2002;296:356-9.

(8.) Wood DJ, Sutter RW, Dowdle WR. Stopping poliovirus vaccination after eradication: issues and challenges. Bull World Health Organ 2000;78:347-57.

(9.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Acute flaccid paralysis associated with circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus--Philippines, 2001. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2001;50:874-5.

Address for correspondence: Mala mala /ma·la/ (ma´lah) [L.]
1. cheek.

2. zygomatic bone.

mala /ma·la/ (mu´lah 
 Rakoto-Andrianarivelo, Unite de Virologie, Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, BP 1274, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar; fax: (261.20) 22.415.34; email: mala@pasteur.mg

Dominique Rousset, * Mala Rakoto-Andrianarivelo, * Richter Razafindratsimandresy, * Bakolalao Randriamanalina, ([dagger]) Sophie Guillot, ([double dagger]) Jean Balanant, ([double dagger]) Philippe Mauclere, * and Francis Delpeyrou ([double dagger])

* Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, Antananarivo, Republic of Madagascar; ([dagger]) Ministry of Health, Antananarivo, Republic of Madagascar; and ([double dagger]) Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
COPYRIGHT 2003 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Delpeyroux, Francis
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Article Type:Letter to the Editor
Date:Jul 1, 2003
Words:1089
Previous Article:Taenia solium Cysticercosis, Irian Jaya, Indonesia. (Letters).(Letter to the Editor)
Next Article:West Nile virus infection in crocodiles. (Letters).(Letter to the Editor)



Related Articles
Hepatitis B vaccine: onward and upward.
First live gene-splice release: it's already history. (vaccine against pseudorabies virus)
Biotech lawsuits filed, regs amended.
Polio policy: a bitter pill to swallow.
Polio policy: status quo. (report on polio vaccine)
Teaching the Sabin vaccine a new trick. (modified polio vaccine provokes immune response to HIV proteins in monkeys and mice) (Brief Article)
Clerics write letter (to church leaders caught in turmoil in Madagascar).
Emergence and rapid spread of tetracycline-resistant Vibrio cholerae strains, Madagascar. (Letters).
Vaccines: Preventing Disease Protecting Health.(Book Review)
Vaccine--derived poliovirus, Thailand, 2003.(LETTERS)(Letter to the Editor)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles