To investigate the role hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) plays in the evolution of hepatitis B virus (HBV), we sequenced the basic core promoter (BCP) and precore (preC) regions of 348 clones total from ten HBV Chinese patients. Eleven mutations were more frequent in HBeAg-negative patients than in HBeAg-positive patients. Further, the sequencing of dozens of variants was found to be necessary to obtain mutation profiles. Phylogenetic and median-joining network analyses suggested that variants from each patient had a single common ancestor (monophyly). Higher haplotype and nucleotide diversities were identified in HBeAg-negative patients. Analysis of dN/dS suggested that viruses experiencing a stronger immune response had lower haplotype diversity. Because HBeAg seroconversion was associated with viral diversity it served as an indicator of HBV evolution. Significantly, this study indicated a larger sampling of variants from each patient was required to understand effectively the properties of HBV.
Keywords: Evolution; HBeAg; Sampling strategy.
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