Dr. Peter Nthiga Mwangi, a postdoctoral research fellow at the UFS-NGS Unit has upscaled rotavirus genomics research. He has recently published three articles, two on G2P[4] rotavirus strains from South Africa and Zambia each, and a G8P[4] rotavirus strain from Rwanda in high impact factor journals; Microbial  GenomicsViruses and Pathogens (recently accepted manuscript), respectively. These are collaborative studies under the African Enteric Genome Initiative (AEVGI) and the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre (WHO CC) for Vaccine Preventable Diseases (VPD) surveillance and pathogen genomics initiatives in collaboration with partners from other institutions in Cameroon, Ghana, Malawi, Rwanda, South Africa, and Zambia. Other UFS-NGS co-authors are Ms. Robyn-Lee Potgieter, Mr. Milton Mogotsi and Prof. Martin Nyaga (senior/corresponding author).

The key findings for these studies include:

These outputs offer valuable insights into the genetic composition of post-vaccine G2P[4] rotavirus strains in South Africa and Zambia and G8P[4] strains from Rwanda and  reinforce the importance of continuous surveillance to combat the spread of these infectious diseases.

The links to access the published articles can be found here: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35446251 ; https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36851715/

Dr. Mwangi is currently working on other rotavirus outputs based on Zambian G2P[6], G9P[8] and Rwandan G12P[8] rotavirus strains and will aim to have a total of six first-author manuscripts in 2023, that will enhance information on the evolution of these strains and post-rotavirus vaccine surveillance at whole genome level in Africa.