Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand

Rotavirus is the main cause of acute viral gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide. Surveillance of group A rotavirus has been conducted in Chiang Mai, Thailand since 1987 up to 2004 and those studies revealed that group A rotavirus was responsible for about 20-61% of diarrheal disea...

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Main Authors: Khamrin P., Maneekarn N., Malasao R., Nguyen T.A., Ishida S., Okitsu S., Ushijima H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-77951978350&partnerID=40&md5=2f3f06f7f1b3e06a55fbc4a72fd9211e
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3668
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-36682014-08-30T02:35:11Z Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand Khamrin P. Maneekarn N. Malasao R. Nguyen T.A. Ishida S. Okitsu S. Ushijima H. Rotavirus is the main cause of acute viral gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide. Surveillance of group A rotavirus has been conducted in Chiang Mai, Thailand since 1987 up to 2004 and those studies revealed that group A rotavirus was responsible for about 20-61% of diarrheal diseases in hospitalized cases. In this study, we reported the continuing surveillance of group A rotavirus in 2005 and found that group A rotavirus was detected in 43 out of 147 (29.3%) stool samples. Five different G and P genotype combinations were detected, G1P[8] (27 strains), G2P[4] (12 strains), G9P[8] (2 strains), G3P[8] (1 strain), and G3P[10] (1 strain). In addition, analysis of their genotypic linkages of G (VP7), P (VP4), I (VP6), E (NSP4), and H (NSP5) genotypes demonstrated that the rotaviruses circulating in Chiang Mai, Thailand carried 3 unique linkage patterns. The G1P[8], G3P[8], and G9P[8] strains carried their VP6, NSP4, NSP5 genotypes of I1, E1, H1, respectively. The G2P[4] strains were linked with I2, E2, H2 genotypes, while an uncommon G3P[10] genotype carried unique genotypes of I8, E3 and H6. These findings provide the overall picture of genotypic linkage data of rotavirus strains circulating in Chiang Mai, Thailand. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. 2014-08-30T02:35:11Z 2014-08-30T02:35:11Z 2010 Article 15671348 10.1016/j.meegid.2010.03.002 20223298 IGENC http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-77951978350&partnerID=40&md5=2f3f06f7f1b3e06a55fbc4a72fd9211e http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3668 English
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
language English
description Rotavirus is the main cause of acute viral gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide. Surveillance of group A rotavirus has been conducted in Chiang Mai, Thailand since 1987 up to 2004 and those studies revealed that group A rotavirus was responsible for about 20-61% of diarrheal diseases in hospitalized cases. In this study, we reported the continuing surveillance of group A rotavirus in 2005 and found that group A rotavirus was detected in 43 out of 147 (29.3%) stool samples. Five different G and P genotype combinations were detected, G1P[8] (27 strains), G2P[4] (12 strains), G9P[8] (2 strains), G3P[8] (1 strain), and G3P[10] (1 strain). In addition, analysis of their genotypic linkages of G (VP7), P (VP4), I (VP6), E (NSP4), and H (NSP5) genotypes demonstrated that the rotaviruses circulating in Chiang Mai, Thailand carried 3 unique linkage patterns. The G1P[8], G3P[8], and G9P[8] strains carried their VP6, NSP4, NSP5 genotypes of I1, E1, H1, respectively. The G2P[4] strains were linked with I2, E2, H2 genotypes, while an uncommon G3P[10] genotype carried unique genotypes of I8, E3 and H6. These findings provide the overall picture of genotypic linkage data of rotavirus strains circulating in Chiang Mai, Thailand. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.
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author Khamrin P.
Maneekarn N.
Malasao R.
Nguyen T.A.
Ishida S.
Okitsu S.
Ushijima H.
spellingShingle Khamrin P.
Maneekarn N.
Malasao R.
Nguyen T.A.
Ishida S.
Okitsu S.
Ushijima H.
Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand
author_facet Khamrin P.
Maneekarn N.
Malasao R.
Nguyen T.A.
Ishida S.
Okitsu S.
Ushijima H.
author_sort Khamrin P.
title Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand
title_short Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand
title_full Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand
title_fullStr Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Genotypic linkages of VP4, VP6, VP7, NSP4, NSP5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in Thailand
title_sort genotypic linkages of vp4, vp6, vp7, nsp4, nsp5 genes of rotaviruses circulating among children with acute gastroenteritis in thailand
publishDate 2014
url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-77951978350&partnerID=40&md5=2f3f06f7f1b3e06a55fbc4a72fd9211e
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3668
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