Spatial Dispersal of Epstein–Barr Virus in South America Reveals an African American Variant in Brazilian Lymphomas
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Viruses
Abstract
Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) is a saliva-borne G-herpesvirus associated with benign and
malignant lymphoproliferation. EBV-mediated tumorigenic mechanisms are not fully understood and
may be related to viral genetic variations. In this work, we characterize the genetic diversity of EBV
from Brazil, assessing 82 samples derived from saliva from asymptomatic carriers (n = 45), biopsies
of benign reactive hyperplasia (n = 4), and lymphomas (n = 33). Phylogenetic and phylogeographic
analysis of the entire coding region of the LMP-1 was performed. Additionally, type 1/type 2
distinction by the EBNA3C gene and Zp variants were evaluated. Our results revealed a high diversity
of EBV in Brazil, with the co-circulation of four main clades, described here as: Mediterranean (40.2%,
n = 33), Raji/Argentine (39%, n = 32), B95-8 (6.1%, n = 5), and Asian II (1.2%, n = 1). The Raji/Argentine
and Mediterranean clades were the most prevalent in South America (45% and 28%, respectively).
The Raji/Argentine clade was associated with polymorphisms I124V/I152L, del30 bp, and ins15 bp
(p < 0.0001, to all clades) and with a high haplotype diversity related to EBV type and Zp variants.
We found that a Raji/Argentine subclade spread primarily from Brazil and later to other South
American countries. Although no LMP1 variant has been directly associated with disease, the
Raji/Argentine clade was predominantly clustered with lymphomas (61%) and the Mediterranean
clade with non-malignant cases (59%) (p = 0.1). These data highlight the high genetic diversity of
EBV circulating in Brazil, calling attention to a Raji-related variant with great recombination potential
in Brazilian lymphomas.
Description
v. 14, n. 8 DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/v14081762
Citation
ALVES, Paula Daniela Souza; SILVA, Marcella Larrate da; COSTA, Aruanã Garcia; ROHAN, Paulo Henrique Nascimento; GAMA, Bianca Ervatti; ABDELHAY, Eliana Saul Furquim Werneck; DELATORRE, Edson Oliveira. Spatial Dispersal of Epstein–Barr Virus in South America Reveals an African American Variant in Brazilian Lymphomas. Viruses, Suiça, v. 14, n. 8, 2022.