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Reconstruction of the origin and dispersal of the worldwide dominant Hepatitis B Virus subgenotype D1.

Nídia Sequeira TrovãoMarijn ThijssenBram VranckenAndrea-Clemencia Pineda-PeñaThomas MinaSamad Amini-Bavil-OlyaeePhilippe LemeyGuy BaeleMahmoud Reza Pourkarim
Published in: Virus evolution (2022)
Hepatitis B is a potentially life-threatening liver infection caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). HBV-D1 is the dominant subgenotype in the Mediterranean basin, Eastern Europe, and Asia. However, little is currently known about its evolutionary history and spatio-temporal dynamics. We use Bayesian phylodynamic inference to investigate the temporal history of HBV-D1, for which we calibrate the molecular clock using ancient sequences, and reconstruct the viral global spatial dynamics based, for the first time, on full-length publicly available HBV-D1 genomes from a wide range of sampling dates. We pinpoint the origin of HBV subgenotype D1 before the current era (BCE) in Turkey/Anatolia. The spatial reconstructions reveal global viral transmission with a high degree of mixing. By combining modern-day and ancient sequences, we ensure sufficient temporal signal in HBV-D1 data to enable Bayesian phylodynamic inference using a molecular clock for time calibration. Our results shed light on the worldwide HBV-D1 epidemics and suggest that this originally Middle Eastern virus significantly affects more distant countries, such as those in mainland Europe.
Keyphrases
  • hepatitis b virus
  • liver failure
  • sars cov
  • single cell
  • south africa
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • gene expression
  • magnetic resonance