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Divergent evolution of norovirus GII/4 by genome recombination from May 2006 to February 2009 in Japan.


ABSTRACT: Norovirus GII/4 is a leading cause of acute viral gastroenteritis in humans. We examined here how the GII/4 virus evolves to generate and sustain new epidemics in humans, using 199 near-full-length GII/4 genome sequences and 11 genome segment clones from human stool specimens collected at 19 sites in Japan between May 2006 and February 2009. Phylogenetic studies demonstrated outbreaks of 7 monophyletic GII/4 subtypes, among which a single subtype, termed 2006b, had continually predominated. Phylogenetic-tree, bootscanning-plot, and informative-site analyses revealed that 4 of the 7 GII/4 subtypes were mosaics of recently prevalent GII/4 subtypes and 1 was made up of the GII/4 and GII/12 genotypes. Notably, single putative recombination breakpoints with the highest statistical significance were constantly located around the border of open reading frame 1 (ORF1) and ORF2 (P

SUBMITTER: Motomura K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2916515 | biostudies-literature | 2010 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Divergent evolution of norovirus GII/4 by genome recombination from May 2006 to February 2009 in Japan.

Motomura Kazushi K   Yokoyama Masaru M   Ode Hirotaka H   Nakamura Hiromi H   Mori Hiromi H   Kanda Tadahito T   Oka Tomoichiro T   Katayama Kazuhiko K   Noda Mamoru M   Tanaka Tomoyuki T   Takeda Naokazu N   Sato Hironori H  

Journal of virology 20100609 16


Norovirus GII/4 is a leading cause of acute viral gastroenteritis in humans. We examined here how the GII/4 virus evolves to generate and sustain new epidemics in humans, using 199 near-full-length GII/4 genome sequences and 11 genome segment clones from human stool specimens collected at 19 sites in Japan between May 2006 and February 2009. Phylogenetic studies demonstrated outbreaks of 7 monophyletic GII/4 subtypes, among which a single subtype, termed 2006b, had continually predominated. Phyl  ...[more]

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