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Dispatch
Novel Measles Virus Genotype, East
Timor and Australia
Doris Chibo,* Michaela Riddell,* Michael Catton,* and Christopher
Birch*
*World Health Organization Regional Measles Reference Laboratory for the
Western Pacific Region, North Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Measles outbreaks in
1999 in Queensland and Victoria, Australia, were caused by a novel strain
of clade G virus (proposed name g3). Epidemiologic and molecular evidence
supports independent circulation of this virus in Queensland, northern
Australia, in addition to importation of the virus by East Timor refugees
seeking safe haven in Australia.
Strategies to reduce Measles virus (MeV) circulation in
industrialized countries, such as aggressive vaccination campaigns targeting
children, have proven successful (1). Nevertheless, through
introduction from other geographic locations, the virus continues to cause
outbreaks in industrialized countries in unvaccinated persons.
In Victoria, measles is a reportable disease, and an enhanced
surveillance strategy has been operational since 1997. A registered nurse
visits the homes of patients with reported cases to collect specimens for
laboratory confirmation, by polymerase chain reaction or detection of MeV-specific
immunoglobulin (Ig) M, of the clinical diagnosis and subsequent
identification of the measles genotype (6). For other
Australian states, specimens from laboratory-confirmed cases are sent to the
WHO regional measles reference laboratory for the western Pacific Region.
Variable regions in the MeV genome include the hemagglutinin (H) and
nucleoprotein (N) genes. The most variable region is the carboxyl-terminal
end (450 nucleotides [nt]) of the N gene. A uniform nomenclature approved by
World Health Organization (WHO) has existed since 1998 and is used in
classifying and naming measles viruses. Currently, 20 genotypes and 1
proposed new genotype exist, encompassing eight clades designated AH. Each
clade contains MeV genotypes that are related by >2.5% nt divergence
in the 450-bp carboxyl-terminal end of the N gene and 2% in the H gene (2).
Clades are distinguished by greater nucleotide differences, location of
nucleotides, and specific nucleotides shared in genotypes of a particular
clade.
Until recently, MeV strains belonging to clade G had not been detected
for >15 years, and the lineage was considered to be either extinct or
inactive (3). However, retrospective sequence analysis of a
measles strain isolated from an immunocompromised infant from the
Netherlands, who had been infected in Indonesia in 1997, and of measles
strains associated with outbreaks in Indonesia and Malaysia in 1999 have
demonstrated that this genotype has circulated in the intervening period (45).
We describe the circulation of a novel genotype of MeV in Australia and
investigate its likely origin.
The Study
In June 1999, the novel genotype was first identified in Victoria in a
24-year-old Australian man who had symptoms of MeV infection shortly after
visiting the northern state of Queensland. In the next 2 months, four more
cases of infection with the same genotype were identified in Queensland.
Epidemiologic links between these five cases could not be established.
In the second week of September 1999, refugees from the newly independent
country of East Timor arrived in Darwin, Northern Territory, where they
underwent preliminary medical examinations before being moved to a
safe-haven refugee camp in regional Victoria. Several days after arriving at
the safe haven, a 4-year-old girl had symptoms that matched the clinical
case definition of measles infection (rash and cough with fever at onset of
rash) (7). The diagnosis was confirmed serologically with
an Enzygnost Anti-measles-virus/IgM kit (Dade Behring, Marburg, Germany).
Active surveillance of all contacts of the initial patient and all residents
reporting to the safe-haven medical center with symptoms suggestive of
measles infection identified 11 other cases (4 laboratory confirmed) in
children <13 years of age in the safe haven; a 26-year-old volunteer worker
who worked at the accident and emergency department of the same hospital
that admitted some of the infected refugees was also diagnosed with measles
infection. Subsequent molecular analysis confirmed the volunteers infection
as being caused by the same virus as the refugees. The last recognized case
of this MeV genotype occurred in early November 1999, when a United Nations
International Force East Timor (Interfet) soldier, who showed clinical
symptoms in East Timor immediately before he was transferred to Darwin, was
confirmed as being infected with MeV.
The commonality of the virus strains circulating in both Australia and
East Timor was confirmed through analysis of MeV RNA (8).
Analysis of the 456-bp carboxyl-terminal region of the N gene of the
Victorian and Queensland samples yielded identical sequences in most cases,
suggesting that these patients were infected with the same strain of MeV as
the East Timorese. Nevertheless, no epidemiologic links were apparent
between the Queensland cases and the subsequent cases in East Timorese
refugees.
The N gene sequences of measles viruses identified from June to November
1999 were most closely related to the Amsterdam prototype G2 strain
identified by de Swart et al. (4). Although phylogenetic
analysis indicated that these sequences belonged within the clade G viruses,
they differed from the G2 prototype strain by 12 (2.6%) nt and by deduction
6 (4%) amino acids (Figure). N gene sequences were
obtained from 17 clinical samples. As a group, these 17 samples shared an
amino acid (439K) in the N protein not previously seen in any other
reference prototypes analyzed. Thirteen of these samples were identical in
sequence (samples 113, Table). Three samples (samples
1416, Table) differed by a single nucleotide, which
resulted in another novel amino acid change, P456L. One sample (sample 17,
Table) diverged by 2 nt, one silent and the other
resulting in the same P456L change seen in samples 1416. Differences seen
in these 17 samples did not appear to be related to the geographic location
of the cases.
Full or partial H gene sequences were derived from the measles viruses of
four samples obtained from patients 8, 13, 15, and 16. Phylogenetic analysis
of the H gene of the first 842 nt of these samples confirmed their
assignment to the clade G viruses (results not shown). The four sequences
analyzed showed up to 1.1% intranucleotide divergence. The MeV from patient
8 varied by 2.1% nt sequence compared with the prototype G2 strain.
Comparison of nucleotide and amino acid sequence of the H gene of the one
sample (from patient 13) with full H gene sequence showed differences from
the prototype G2 strain of 35 (1.9%) nt and 13 (2.1%) amino acids. This
sequence also contained amino acids in the H protein not previously found in
other reference prototypes, namely 212Q, 225H, 238D, and 495N. Phylogenetic
analysis of the full H gene sequence showed similar patterns of relatedness
to those obtained for the N gene (results not shown).
Together, phylogenetic analysis of the N and H genes and the appearance
of novel amino acids in the H protein provided strong evidence that these
measles virus were sufficiently unrelated to the prototype G2 strain to
enable their classification as a new genotype within clade G. We propose
that measles virus/Vic.AU/24.99 be the reference sequence for a new
genotype, g3, pending isolation of a reference strain (2).
GenBank accession numbers for the 456-bp carboxyl-terminal end of three of
the N gene sequences are shown in the Table. The
GenBank accession number for the full-length H gene is AF35362.
The novel g3 MeV was not the only strain circulating in Australia during
this time. Coinciding with the genotype g3 outbreak, four cases of genotype
D8 were identified in Victoria. Three months earlier, small clusters of
measles cases were identified in two other Australian states, genotype D5 in
the Northern Territory and genotype D3 in Western Australia. Soon after the
g3 outbreak, genotype D7 circulated in Victoria, Queensland, and the
Northern Territory.
In recent years, vaccination campaigns have been undertaken in East Timor
under the guidance of United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and WHO. In
October 1999, UNICEF conducted a major immunization campaign in Dili, East
Timor, reaching approximately 4,000 children <5 years of age; in March 2000,
>45,000 children were vaccinated (9). Nevertheless, from
January 2000 to May 2001, a total of 1,479 cases of suspected measles
infection were reported in East Timor.
In an industrialized country like Australia, where no apparent
circulation of an indigenous MeV strain occurs, the use of epidemiologic
surveillance and molecular characterization is important in tracing the
source and transmission pathways of MeV imported from areas where the
disease is endemic. Apart from expanding our global knowledge of MeV
genotypes, molecular characterization is also useful in clarifying
epidemiologic links and distinguishing between vaccine-associated and
wild-type infection.
Despite the novelty of the circulating MeV genotypes, our findings
highlight the need for continued vigilance if the virus is to be eradicated.
The humanitarian movement of refugees from a country where MeV infection is
uncontrolled to countries with relatively high MeV herd immunity is now a
common occurrence. Thus, the potential for transmission of this highly
infectious virus to residual susceptibles in the wider community remains a
distinct possibility, as demonstrated by this outbreak. Measures, such as
vaccination of military personnel and support staff working directly with
displaced persons; use of appropriate infection-control procedures when
attending sick refugees; and screening of newly arrived refugees from
measles-endemic areas, are likely to decrease transmission of MeV in
industrialized countries.
Acknowledgments
We thank Stephen Lambert, David Smith, and Robyn Wood for their
assistance with provision of clinical material and epidemiologic
information.
Ms. Chibo is a medical scientist at the Victorian Infectious Diseases
Reference Laboratory in Victoria, Australia. Her main interests are the use
of molecular techniques and phylogenetic analysis to study viruses of public
health importance and mechanisms associated with development of resistance
to antiviral drugs by herpesviruses.
Address for correspondence: Christopher Birch, 10 Wreckyn St., North
Melbourne 3051, Victoria, Australia; fax: 61 3 9342 2666; e-mail:
chris.birch@mh.org.au
References
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Progress towards global control and regional elimination 19981999.
Wkly Epidemiol Rec 1999;74:42940.
- World Health Organization.
Nomenclature for describing the genetic characteristics of wild-type
measles viruses. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2001;76:2427.
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Expanded programme on immunizationstandardization of the nomenclature for
describing the genetic characteristics of wild-type measles viruses.
Wkly Epidemiol Rec 1998;73:2659.
- de Swart RL, Wertheim-van Dillen PME, van Binnendijk RS, Muller CP,
Frenkel J, Osterhaus ADME.
Measles in a Dutch hospital introduced by an immuno-compromised infant
from Indonesia infected with a new virus genotype. Lancet
2000;355:2012.
- Rota PA, Liffick S, Rosenthal S, Heriyanto B, Chua KB.
Measles genotype G2 in Indonesia and Malaysia. Lancet 2000;355:15578.
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Commun Dis Intell 1999;23:514.
- Ferson MJ, Young LC, Robertson PW, Whybin LR.
Difficulties in clinical diagnosis of measles: proposal for a modified
case definition. Med J Aust 1995;163:3646.
- Chibo D, Birch CJ, Rota PA, Catton MG.
Molecular characterization of measles viruses isolated in Victoria,
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- World Health Organization. Background paper for Donors Meeting on
East Timor. Canberra, 1415 June 2001. Dili, East Timor. World Health
Organization; 2001. Available from: URL:
http://www.who.int/disasters/repo/6979.doc
| Table.
Unique predicted amino acid differences compared with all reference
measles virus sequences in 456-bp carboxyl-terminal end of Na
geneb |
|
|
Sample no. |
Predicted amino acid differences
|
Accession no. |
|
|
113 |
439Kc |
AF353622 |
|
1416 |
439Kc; 456L |
AY055850 |
|
17 |
439Kc; 456L |
AY055851 |
|
aN,
nucleoprotein.
bIdentified from 17 clinical samples in the outbreak.
cUnique to proposed genotype g3.
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