New Andes virus isolate haplotype obtained during prospective close contacts follow-up of an Hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome fatal case, Chile
- David Ojcius
- 3 hours ago
- 1 min read
Highlights
ANDV can be isolated in cell culture only in the absence of neutralizing antibodies.
The monitoring of close contacts of ANDV cases allows to identify prospective cases.
We isolated a new ANDV human strain from an early blood sample of a secondary case.
CHI-Hu13724 is a different haplotype from the previous ANDV reference strains.
Isolation of currently zoonotic ANDV strains helps the study of viral pathogenicity.
Abstract
Andes virus (ANDV) is a zoonotic orthohantavirus that causes hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome. Transmission occurs mainly through contact with infected rodent excreta and, less frequently, between humans. Viral isolation from human samples is rare; in Chile, only one strain (CHI-7913, 2002) has been reported. The limited number of isolates reflects the challenge of obtaining samples during early viremia before antibodies appear, and maintaining long-term production of infectious particles in culture. We investigated an asymptomatic case from a family cluster, sampled during early infection. The absence of anti-ANDV antibodies in sera was confirmed by ELISA. Blood fractions were used to infect Vero E6 cells for six weeks, with infectivity monitored by RT-qPCR and Immunofluorescence. We obtained a replication-stable isolate from the buffy-coat fraction, achieving high viral loads at early passages. Whole-genome sequencing revealed a novel haplotype with mutations that reverted during non-human cell culture adaptation. This isolate, designated CHI-Hu13724, represents a new human-derived ANDV strain first reported in over two decades in Chile. It provides a valuable tool to study viral replication, infectivity, and pathogenicity.
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