| Literature DB >> 12095446 |
Doris Chibo1, Michaela Riddell, Michael Catton, Christopher Birch.
Abstract
Measles outbreaks in 1999 in Queensland and Victoria, Australia, were caused by a novel strain of clade G virus (proposed name g3). Epidemiologic and molecular evidence supports independent circulation of this virus in Queensland, northern Australia, in addition to importation of the virus by East Timor refugees seeking safe haven in Australia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12095446 PMCID: PMC2730329 DOI: 10.3201/eid0807.010409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigurePhylogenetic analysis with the Phylip software program of DNAdist (maximum likelihood/neighbor-joining, 1000 bootstrap cycles) of the carboxyl-terminal 456-bp nucleoprotein (N) gene sequence of measles virus/Vic.AU/24.99 circulating in Australia and East Timor. World Health Organization–designated prototype strains are shown in bold, and the proposed new g3 genotype is shown in bold and underlined. Jakarta 1999 (G2) has also been included to show the difference between the clade G viruses. Statistically significant bootstrap values (>80%) are indicated. Scale (0.01) indicates nucleotide substitutions per site.
Unique predicted amino acid differences compared with all reference measles virus sequences in 456-bp carboxyl-terminal end of Na geneb
| Sample no. | Predicted amino acid differences | Accession no. |
|---|---|---|
| 1–13 | 439Kc | AF353622 |
| 14–16 | 439Kc; 456L | AY055850 |
| 17 | 439Kc; 456L | AY055851 |
aN, nucleoprotein. bIdentified from 17 clinical samples in the outbreak cUnique to proposed genotype g3.