High prevalence of Duck Hepatitis B virus-associated coinfection in Southwest China
Xiaoming Lin, Lizhen Gong, Yajia Gou, Yi Liu, Sai Mao, Shun Chen, Mafeng Liu, Dekang Zhu, Mingshu Wang, Renyong Jia, Shaqiu Zhang, Ying Wu, Juan Huang, Bin Tian, Qiao Yang, Xinxin Zhao, Anchun Cheng, Xumin Ou

TL;DR
This study found that Duck Hepatitis B virus is highly prevalent in Southwest China and often co-occurs with other hepatitis viruses and bacterial infections in ducks.
Contribution
The study reveals the high prevalence and co-infection patterns of Duck Hepatitis B virus with other viruses and bacteria in diseased ducks.
Findings
Duck Hepatitis B virus had the highest infection rate (86.01%) among five hepatitis viruses in diseased duck livers.
Over half of DHBV-infected ducks were co-infected with Duck Hepatitis A virus.
DHBV co-infection was positively correlated with other hepatitis viruses and bacterial infections.
Abstract
Currently, five types of duck hepatitis viruses have been documented, and they are all associated with liver disorders. However, the prevalence of their coinfections involving these viruses remains largely uncertain. Herein, we screened the prevalence of the five types of hepatitis viruses from A to E in 143 samples of diseased duck livers during 2019–2021 in Southwest China. We found the highest infection ratio (86.01%, 123/143) of duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) among all five types of hepatitis viruses. Importantly, a large portion of DHBV-associated coinfections were identified, with 52.85% (65/123) co-infected with Duck Hepatitis A virus (DHAV), 39.84% (49/123) with tentative Duck Hepatitis D virus (DHDV), and 34.96% (43/123) with Duck Hepatitis E virus (DHEV), respectively. Interestingly, a positive correlation between the DHBV-positive rate and the infection rates of the other…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Immunology Research · Hepatitis Viruses Studies and Epidemiology · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
