| Literature DB >> 17215348 |
Hiroyuki Eda1, Shigeru Ozawa, Kamesaburo Yoshino, Kazuo Yanagi.
Abstract
Thelifelong latent infection-reactivation mode of infection of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) transmitted by close contact has allowed a diversity of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) variations to accumulate in human populations. Whether and how the variants of the HSV-1 that is ubiquitous worldwide spread to different human populations is not clear. In our previous study the geographically gradient distribution of the HSV-1 BgK(L) variant, which is a good marker for the BgK(L):SaCFJ(M):SaGH(M):SaD/E(L):KpM(S) variant, suggested that BgK(L) dispersed geographically. Southern hybridization analyses showed that in BgK(L) the BglII cleavage site between the BglII K and small "Q/#13" fragments is lost, the SalI cleavage sites between the SalI J and C and between SalI F and J fragments are lost, and the SalI E fragment is abnormally large (SaE(L) variation). The RFLP and geographic distribution of one more HSV-1 RFLP variant, BgO(L), were comparatively analyzed. The BglII cleavage site between the BglII O and Q/#13 fragments is lost in BgOL. BgO(L) clinical isolates were not associated with any of the SaCFJ(M), SaE(L), SaGH(M), or KpM(S) variations, whereas one-fourth of the non-BgO(L):non-BgK(L) isolates was associated with SaCFJ(M) and SaGH(M), indicating that BgK(L) and BgO(L) are distant in terms of diversification. BgO(L) is distributed highly in the northeastern region and the southwestern island of Kyushu but is rare between the two regions in Japan, in a remarkable contrast to BgK(L). These are the first epidemiologic data to show contrasting geographic distribution profiles of two HSV-1 variants and suggest the gradual dispersion and replacement of HSV-1 variants.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17215348 PMCID: PMC1829117 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.01236-06
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948