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Characterisation of human tick-borne encephalitis virus from Sweden

✍ Scribed by Mats Haglund; Sirkka Vene; Marianne Forsgren; Göran Günther; Bo Johansson; Matthias Niedrig; Alexander Plyusnin; Lars Lindquist; Åke Lundkvist


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
139 KB
Volume
71
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Viruses of the tick‐borne encephalitis (TBE) antigenic complex, within the family Flaviviridae, cause a variety of diseases including uncomplicated febrile illness, meningo‐encephalitis and haemorrhagic fever. Different wildlife species act as reservoir hosts with ixodid tick species as vectors. TBE virus (TBEV) causes 40–130 cases confirmed serologically in Sweden each year. Characteristics of TBEV strains circulating in Sweden have not been investigated previously and no viral sequence data has been reported. In the present study, virus strains were isolated from serum of patients with clinical symptoms consistent with acute TBEV infection. Serologic characterisation, using a panel of E‐specific monoclonal antibodies and cross‐neutralisation tests, indicated that the Swedish strains of TBEV, isolated 1958–1994, all belonged to the Western TBEV subtype, which includes the Austrian vaccine strain Neudoerfl. Genetic analysis of a partial E‐sequence confirmed this close relationship: all Swedish TBEV strains belonged to the European lineage of the Western TBEV subtype, which includes the previously characterised strains Neudoerfl, Hypr, and Kumlinge. Further, three Swedish strains showed partial E‐sequences identical to that of the Finnish Kumlinge strain, ten Swedish strains formed a well‐supported separate cluster, whereas four others did not show any real clustering. No apparent correlation was observed in comparison of clinical parameters with genetic data or geographic origin of the strains. J. Med. Virol. 71:610–621, 2003. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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