| Literature DB >> 23637878 |
Muhammad Masroor Alam1, Adnan Khurshid, Muhammad Suleman Rana, Shahzad Shaukat, Salmaan Sharif, Mehar Angez, Muhammad Naeem, Syed Sohail Zahoor Zaidi.
Abstract
Astroviruses are globally known enteropathogens causing gastroenteritis and diarrhea, with eight well defined serotypes. Epidemiological studies have recognized serotype-1 as the most common subtype but no such data is available in Pakistan. During 2009-2010, we found astroviruses in 41 out of 535 (7%) samples collected from hospitalized children. Thirty one strains belonged to serotype-1 and clustered into two distinct lineages. Serotype-3, -4 and -6 were detected with 97-98% genetic homology to Indian and Chinese strains.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23637878 PMCID: PMC3630178 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0061667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Astrovirus detection rates in various age groups of children hospitalized during 2009–2010.
The data labels indicate the percentage of positive samples among each age group (1a). Month wise distribution of astrovirus positive samples between January, 2009 to December, 2010 (1b).
Figure 2Phylogenetic analysis of Human Astrovirus strains identified in this study based on the partial ORF2 region (348 bases) encoding outer capsid precursor protein.
The reference strains and closest match isolates detected through BLAST are given for genetic comparison. The phylogenetic tree with 500 bootstrap replicates was reconstructed using neighbor joining method and the K-2P model through MEGA 4.0. Serotype-1 strains were compared to four prototype strains (USA-GenBank accession number L23513, isolated in 1994), United Kingdom (GenBank accession number Z25771, isolated in 1990), Japan (GenBank accession number AB009985, isolated in 1997) and Germany (GenBank accession number AY720892). Taxa with arrow head indicates prototype strains within each serotype.