Abstract
Oropouche virus (OROV) is responsible for outbreaks of Oropouche fever in parts of South America. We recently identified and isolated OROV from a febrile Ecuadorian patient, however, a previously published qRT-PCR assay did not detect OROV in the patient sample. A primer mismatch to the Ecuadorian OROV lineage was identified from metagenomic sequencing data. We report the optimisation of an qRT-PCR assay for the Ecuadorian OROV lineage, which subsequently identified a further five cases in a cohort of 196 febrile patients. We isolated OROV via cell culture and developed an algorithmically-designed primer set for whole-genome amplification of the virus. Metagenomic sequencing of the patient samples provided OROV genome coverage ranging from 68–99%. The additional cases formed a single phylogenetic cluster together with the initial case. OROV should be considered as a differential diagnosis for Ecuadorian patients with febrile illness to avoid mis-diagnosis with other circulating pathogens.
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CITATION STYLE
Wise, E. L., Márquez, S., Mellors, J., Paz, V., Atkinson, B., Gutierrez, B., … Pullan, S. T. (2020). Oropouche virus cases identified in Ecuador using an optimised qrt-pcr informed by metagenomic sequencing. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 14(1), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007897
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