## Abstract An unusual strain of human rotavirus G3P[10] (CMH079/05) was detected in a stool sample of a 2‐year‐old child admitted to the hospital with severe diarrhea in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Analysis of the VP7 gene sequence revealed highest identities with unusual human rotavirus G3 strain CMH22
Analysis of the VP6 gene of human and porcine group A rotavirus strains with unusual subgroup specificities
✍ Scribed by Aksara Thongprachum; Pattara Khamrin; Prayuth Saekhow; Chansom Pantip; Supatra Peerakome; Hiroshi Ushijima; Niwat Maneekarn
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 530 KB
- Volume
- 81
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Full‐length VP6 amino acid sequences of human and porcine rotaviruses with subgroup (SG) (I + II) and SG non‐(I + II) were analyzed in comparison with those of SG I and SG II. In human rotaviruses, the strains in the same SG shared a very high degree of amino acid identity, ranging from 97.4% to 99.4% for SG I, 95.9% to 100% for SG II, and 99.4% to100% for SG non‐(I + II), while viruses in different SGs shared somewhat lower sequence identity at 90.4–93.1%. Conserved amino acids that distinguished the strains of SG I from SG II were observed at 21 positions. The viruses with SG non‐(I + II) shared sequence identity with SG II as high as 97.2–99.7%, suggesting that they belonged to genogroup II. Similarly, porcine rotaviruses in the same SG shared 96.4–99.7% for SG I, 98.2–100% for SG II, 97.4–100% for SG (I + II), and 96.2–99.7% for SG non‐(I + II), while strains in different SGs shared sequence identity ranging from 91.9% to 94.4%. Interestingly, the strains with SG (I + II) and SG non‐(I + II) shared a high degree of sequence identity with SG I, at 96.4–100% and 94.7–99.7% respectively, suggesting that they are related to porcine SG I strains. The conserved amino acids which distinguished SG I from SG II were observed at 13 positions. The strains with SG I, SG (I + II), and SG non‐(I + II) showed identical amino acid residues at these positions. Phylogenetic analysis strongly supported the findings of the sequence analysis. J. Med. Virol. 81:183–191, 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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