Strain variation of R5 direct repeats in the right-hand portion of the long unique segment of varicella-zoster virus DNA

  • Hondo R
  • Yogo Y
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Abstract

We located a region of interstrain size variability in a short segment in an area at the right-hand end of the long unique sequence of the varicella-zoster viral genome. Varicella-zoster virus strains isolated in a district of Japan were classified into three groups on the basis of the size of this segment. Sequence comparison of the variable segment among strains from different groups revealed that the tandem direct repeat, R5, in the segment was variable among strains. R5, which was first discovered in a European strain (Dumas), contained a direct duplication of 88-base-pair (bp) elements separated by a 24-bp element (A.J. Davison and J.E. Scott, J. Gen. Virol. 67:1759-1816, 1986). We found that one 88-bp element and one 24-bp element constitute a repeating unit whose copy number varied from one to three among strains. The simplest R5 we detected was similar to that of Dumas, but there were a few base mismatches between these two R5 structures.

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Hondo, R., & Yogo, Y. (1988). Strain variation of R5 direct repeats in the right-hand portion of the long unique segment of varicella-zoster virus DNA. Journal of Virology, 62(8), 2916–2921. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.62.8.2916-2921.1988

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