4 research outputs found

    Data from: Zika virus in the Americas: early epidemiological and genetic findings

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    Brazil has experienced an unprecedented epidemic of Zika virus (ZIKV), with ~30,000 cases reported to date. ZIKV was first detected in Brazil in May 2015 and cases of microcephaly potentially associated with ZIKV infection were identified in November 2015. Using next generation sequencing we generated seven Brazilian ZIKV genomes, sampled from four self-limited cases, one blood donor, one fatal adult case, and one newborn with microcephaly and congenital malformations. Phylogenetic and molecular clock analyses show a single introduction of ZIKV into the Americas, estimated to have occurred between May-Dec 2013, more than 12 months prior to the detection of ZIKV in Brazil. The estimated date of origin coincides with an increase in air passengers to Brazil from ZIKV endemic areas, and with reported outbreaks in Pacific Islands. ZIKV genomes from Brazil are phylogenetically interspersed with those from other South American and Caribbean countries. Mapping mutations onto existing structural models revealed the context of viral amino acid changes present in the outbreak lineage; however no shared amino acid changes were found among the three currently available virus genomes from microcephaly cases. Municipality-level incidence data indicate that reports of suspected microcephaly in Brazil best correlate with ZIKV incidence around week 17 of pregnancy, although this does not demonstrate causation. Our genetic description and analysis of ZIKV isolates in Brazil provide a baseline for future studies of the evolution and molecular epidemiology in the Americas of this emerging virus

    Epidemiological Data: Numbers of suspected ZIKV cases and suspected microcephaly cases per state and per epidemiological week.

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    Contains 1) CSV file with number suspected ZIKV cases from January 2015 to the end of December 2015; 2) CSV file with number of suspected microcephaly cases from January 2015 to the first week of January 2016. Numbers correspond to suspected microcephaly cases at week 20 of pregnancy; 3) CSV file with codes of state of residence and municipality of residence in Brazil; and 4) R scripts for correlation analysis described in SI Section 1.5

    Sequence data details and alignments for dataset A and B.

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    Contains (1) table with accession numbers, isolate names, cell passage history, publication details, country/location of sampling, sampling dates and (2) Fasta format sequence alignments of datasets A and B

    BEAST XML input file used for genetic analysis.

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    BEAST XML input file used to generate Figure 3 under a strict clock model, a Bayesian skyline coalescent prior and a CTMC prior on the clock rate
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