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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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## 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