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Short Communication |
1 Department of Clinical Molecular Informative Medicine, Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kawasumi, Mizuho, Nagoya 467-8601, Japan
2 Department of Medical Sciences, Toshiba General Hospital, Tokyo 140-8522, Japan
3 Department of Hepatology, Sapporo Kosei General Hospital, Sapporo 060-0033, Japan
4 Center for Gastroenterology, Teine Keijinkai Hospital, Sapporo 006-8555, Japan
5 First Department of Internal Medicine, Iwate Medical University, Iwate 020-8505, Japan
6 Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Saitama Medical University, Saitama 350-0495, Japan
7 Department of Internal Medicine, Kokuho Central Hospital, Nara 636-0302, Japan
8 Department of Internal Medicine, Tottori Red Cross Hospital, Tottori 680-8517, Japan
9 Transfusion Section, University of the Ryukyus School of Medicine, Okinawa 903-0215, Japan
10 Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Musashino Red Cross Hospital, Tokyo 180-8610, Japan
11 Department of Gastroenterology, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Urayasu Hospital, Chiba 279-0021, Japan
Correspondence
Masashi Mizokami
mizokami{at}med.nagoya-cu.ac.jp
The ancestor(s) of apparently Japan-indigenous strains of Hepatitis E virus (HEV) was probably of foreign origin, but it remains unclear when and from where it made inroads. In this study, 24 genotype 3 and 24 genotype 4 HEV strains recovered in Japan each showed a significant cluster, clearly distinct from those of foreign strains, in the phylogenetic tree constructed from an 821 nt RNA polymerase gene fragment. The evolutionary rate, approximately 0·8x103 nucleotide substitutions per site per year, enabled tracing of the demographic history of HEV and suggested that the ancestors of Japan-indigenous HEV had made inroads around 1900, when several kinds of Yorkshire pig were imported from the UK to Japan. Interestingly, the evolutionary growth of genotype 3 in Japan has been slow since the 1920s, whereas genotype 4 has spread rapidly since the 1980s. In conclusion, these data suggest that the indigenization and spread of HEV in Japan were associated with the popularization of eating pork.
The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers for the HEV nucleotide sequences reported in this paper are shown in Fig. 1.
Supplementary tables are available in JGV Online.
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