The isolation and identification of the 87A strain of epidemic hepatitis E virus (HEV) by means of cell culturing have been described previously. This paper reports the successful isolation of a sporadic HEV strain (G93-2) in human lung carcinoma cell (A549) cultures. The etiology, molecular and biological properties, and serological relationship of this new strain to other, epidemic HEV strains are described. The propagation of both sporadic and epidemic HEV strains in a cell culture system will facilitate vaccine research.
The nucleotide sequence of Hepatitis E virus (HEV) serous isolates (G-9 and G-20) from Guangzhou, South China, which has been reported previously, are divergent significantly from those of other reported HEV isolates. In order to investigate more extensively the Guangzhou isolate, the 93G strain was isolated from the faecal sample of the same individual as G-9 by A549 cell culture and identified immunologically and by molecular biological techniques. The results showed that strain 93G could be propagated in an A549 cell line causing cytopathic effects. The viral particles were aggregated by a specific antibody to HEV Chinese Xinjiang strain (87A) observed using immunoelectron microscopy and were similar morphologically to HEV from other sources. In this study, an indirect fluorescent antibody assay was first developed to examine HEV antigen in the infected cells, by immunofluorescence in the cytoplasm and on the surface membrane of the cells. The 58-kDa and 82-kDa native structural proteins of HEV were also identified in this study by Western blotting. The 93G genome showed high homology (93%) with G-9 previously reported but was also as divergent from the Burmese, Mexican, Chinese Xinjiang isolates and the recently reported US-1 isolate, as was G-9. The data presented indicate that 93G propagated in A549 cells, together with its related serum isolate G-9, represents another HEV strain circulating in China and is responsible for some sporadic hepatitis E infections.
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