Genomic characterization and recombination analysis of hepatitis E virus in humans and swine across Asia: implications for food safety
Dingyu Liu, Zhenwen He, Qin Luo, Baoling Liu, Pian Zhang, Jing Chen, Xiaohu Wang, Gang Wang, Yuan Huang, Hua Xiang, Rujian Cai

TL;DR
This study analyzes hepatitis E virus genomes in humans and pigs in Asia to understand its evolution and zoonotic transmission risks.
Contribution
The study identifies multiple recombination events in HEV genomes, particularly in China, and supports cross-species transmission between swine and humans.
Findings
HEV-4 is predominant in Asia, especially China, while HEV-3 is regionally endemic.
34 potential natural recombination events were identified, with 14 occurring between swine and human strains.
Five inter-genotypic recombination events suggest ongoing genetic exchange in HEV populations.
Abstract
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a globally prevalent zoonotic pathogen posing major public health risks. Swine, a major meat source, carry HEV strains genetically similar to those in humans, highlighting the risk of zoonotic foodborne transmission. This study aimed to investigate the evolutionary history of HEV through phylogenetic and recombination analyses, further provide key reference bases for public health management, improve food safety standards, and offer support for developing effective strategies to prevent foodborne hepatitis E infections. We analyzed 348 full-length genomes of HEV isolated from humans and pigs in Asia over the past three decades. Phylogenetic analysis was conducted using the neighbor-joining method in MEGA11. Recombination analysis was performed with seven methods in RDP4, and sequence similarity was visualized using Simplot. HEV-4 predominated in Asia,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis Viruses Studies and Epidemiology · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Hepatitis B Virus Studies
