Detection of head-to-tail DNA sequences of human bocavirus in clinical samples

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Abstract

Parvoviruses are single stranded DNA viruses that replicate in a so called "rolling-hairpin" mechanism, a variant of the rolling circle replication known for bacteriophages like X174. The replication intermediates of parvoviruses thus are concatemers of head-to-head or tail-to-tail structure. Surprisingly, in case of the novel human bocavirus, neither head-to-head nor tail-to-tail DNA sequences were detected in clinical isolates; in contrast head-to-tail DNA sequences were identified by PCR and sequencing. Thereby, the head-to-tail sequences were linked by a novel sequence of 54 bp of which 20 bp also occur as conserved structures of the palindromic ends of parvovirus MVC which in turn is a close relative to human bocavirus. © 2011 Lüsebrink et al.

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Lüsebrink, J., Schildgen, V., Tillmann, R. L., Wittleben, F., Böhmer, A., Müller, A., & Schildgen, O. (2011). Detection of head-to-tail DNA sequences of human bocavirus in clinical samples. PLoS ONE, 6(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019457

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