Genetic analysis of a human rotavirus that belong to subgroup I but has an RNA pattern typical of subgroup II human rotaviruses

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Abstract

We have previously found, during an epidemiological study in Japan, a novel human rotavirus that belongs to subgroup I but has a long RNA pattern typical of subgroup II human rotaviruses. From the stool specimen containing this virus, we successfully isolated in MA104 cells a rotavirus, designated AU-1, which possesses these novel characteristics. The possibility that strain AU-1 was a laboratory contaminant of an animal rotavirus previously adapted to tissue culture cells was ruled out, and the identity of the AU-1 strain was established. Genetic analysis by RNA-RNA hybridization revealed that the AU-1 strain is not a simple reassortant between subgroup I and II human rotaviruses but that it shares a high level of sequence homology only with the gene encoding VP7 (the major neutralization protein) of serotype 3 human rotaviruses. Weak homology of the genomic RNA segments was also observed between the AU-1 strain and animal rotavirus strains, including rhesus rotavirus strain RRV and bovine rotavirus strain NCDV. These results suggest that the AU-1 strain may be an animal rotavirus that infected a human.

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Nakagomi, O., Nakagomi, T., Hoshino, Y., Flores, J., & Kapikian, A. Z. (1987). Genetic analysis of a human rotavirus that belong to subgroup I but has an RNA pattern typical of subgroup II human rotaviruses. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 25(7), 1159–1164. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.25.7.1159-1164.1987

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