5 research outputs found

    Molecular Detection and Epidemiology of Sapporo-Like Viruses

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    Sapporo-like viruses (SLVs) are associated with acute gastroenteritis in humans. Due to a limited supply of available reagents for diagnosis, little is known about the incidence and pathogenicity of these viruses. We have developed a first-generation generic reverse transcriptase (RT) PCR assay based on a single primer pair targeting the RNA polymerase gene. With this assay, 55 (93%) of the 59 stool specimens collected in a 10-year period of time (1988 to 1998) and containing typical caliciviruses by electron microscopy tested positive and could be confirmed by Southern hybridization. By phylogenetic analysis, most SLV strains could be classified into one of the three recently described genotypes. However, three samples clustered separately, forming a potential new genotype. We sequenced the complete capsid gene of one of the strains in this cluster: Hu/SLV/Stockholm/97/SE. Alignment of the capsid sequences showed 40 to 74% amino acid identity among strains of the different clusters. Phylogenetic analysis of the aligned sequences confirmed the placing of Hu/SLV/Stockholm/97/SE into a new distinct genetic cluster. This is the first report on the development of a broadly reactive RT-PCR assay for the detection of SLVs

    Upsurge of human enterovirus 68 infections in patients with severe respiratory tract infections

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    Background: Enterovirus 68 (EV68) belongs to species Human enterovirus D. It is unique among enteroviruses because it shares properties with human rhinoviruses. After the first isolation in 1962 from four children with respiratory illness, reports of (clusters of) EV68 infections have been rare. During the autumn of 2010, we noticed an upsurge of EV68 infections in the Northern part of the Netherlands in patients with severe respiratory illness. Objectives: To give a detailed description of the clinical and virological data of patients with EV68 infection identified in 2010, and compare these with data collected in 2009. Study design: We systematically collected clinical data from patients with an EV68 infection detected in 2010. We added four patients with an EV68 infection from 2009. Further characterization of EV68 was performed by partial sequence analysis of the VP1 genomic region. Results: In 2010, EV68 was identified as the only cause of respiratory illness in 24 patients, of which 5 had to be admitted to the intensive care unit. Sequence analysis revealed different lineages in the majority of EV68 detected in 2010 as compared to the 2009 isolates. Conclusions: We noticed an increase of EV68 infections and present clinical as well as sequence data, in which two distinct phylogenetic clusters could be identified. (C) 2011 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved
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