## Abstract In Yangon, Myanmar, a human group B rotavirus was first detected in 2007 in a stool specimen from a sporadic case of acute gastroenteritis in an adult. The strain was designated as MMRβB1. The fullβlength sequences of the MMRβB1 genes encoding VP7, VP4 (VP5\* and VP8\*), VP6, and NSP4 w
Association of the G4 rotavirus genotype with gastroenteritis in adults
β Scribed by Susan A. Feeney; Suzanne J. Mitchell; Frederick Mitchell; Dorothy E. Wyatt; Derek Fairley; Conall McCaughey; Peter V. Coyle; Hugh J. O'Neill
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 92 KB
- Volume
- 78
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Rotavirus is the most common etiological cause of acute viral gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide, yet its role in the adult population is less well understood. We have recently identified rotavirus as the causative agent of severe diarrhea in adults, specifically in two gastroenteritis outbreaks in separate care for the elderly homes. Strain typing has shown the continued presence of P[8]G1, the emergence of P[8]G9, and the reemergence of P[8]G4. A total of 26 community cases and 6 outbreak cases of rotavirus infection, positive via a molecular screening assay, were subsequently amplified using VP4 and VP7 specific primers (Con2/Con3 and 1A/1B primer sets, respectively). The age range of patients investigated was from <1 year to 89 years. The resulting PCR products were cloned into TOPO10 PCR IV vector and sequenced to give the P- and G-type accordingly. All sequence data were subjected to BLAST analysis. Three different rotavirus types P[8]G1, P[8]G4, and P[8]G9 were identified. Types P[8]G1 and P[8]G9 were identified as circulating within the community, whereas the third type P[8]G4 was identified only in an elderly care outbreak. The identification of G9 rotaviruses supports evidence of emergence of the genotype on a global scale.
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