TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular epidemiology of rubella by nucleotide sequences of the rubella virus E1 gene in three East Asian countries
AU - Katow, Shigetaka
AU - Minahara, Hiroko
AU - Fukushima, Masao
AU - Yamaguchi, Yumi
N1 - Funding Information:
Received 16 October 1996; revised 4 April 1997. Informed consent was obtained from patients or their parents for sampling of clinical specimens. Financial support: Japan Health Sciences Foundation (1-2-3B to S.K.); Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture (05454587 grant-in-aid for scientific research to S.K.). Reprints or correspondence: Dr. Shigetaka Katow, Dept. of Viral Disease and Vaccine Control, National Institute of Health, Gakuen 4-7-1, Musashi-Murayama, Tokyo 208, Japan. * Present affiliations: Center for Molecular Biology and Cytogenetics, SRL Inc., Hachioji, Tokyo (M.F.); New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization of Japan, Tokyo (Y.Y.).
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - Twenty-six strains of rubella virus were compared with each other for a molecular epidemiologic study of the virus in three East Asian countries, using the E1 gene of 1443 nucleotides and the following 41 nucleotides in a noncoding region. Nucleotide substitution rates among strains were 0.0- 9.4/100 nucleotides. A phylogenetic tree drawn indicated that 2 of 3 Chinese strains were quite different from the other 24 strains; all isolates in the 1960s were classified into a single group independent of the place of isolation, which includes isolates from Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom; 11 strains of Japanese isolates collected during 1976-1991 made one subbranch derived from the 1960s group; and 2 isolates from the northeast part of Japan in 1990 made a third but minor unique branch. Therefore, at least two groups of the virus cocirculated in Japan around 1990. Antigenic variation of the virus was very small among these strains.
AB - Twenty-six strains of rubella virus were compared with each other for a molecular epidemiologic study of the virus in three East Asian countries, using the E1 gene of 1443 nucleotides and the following 41 nucleotides in a noncoding region. Nucleotide substitution rates among strains were 0.0- 9.4/100 nucleotides. A phylogenetic tree drawn indicated that 2 of 3 Chinese strains were quite different from the other 24 strains; all isolates in the 1960s were classified into a single group independent of the place of isolation, which includes isolates from Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom; 11 strains of Japanese isolates collected during 1976-1991 made one subbranch derived from the 1960s group; and 2 isolates from the northeast part of Japan in 1990 made a third but minor unique branch. Therefore, at least two groups of the virus cocirculated in Japan around 1990. Antigenic variation of the virus was very small among these strains.
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U2 - 10.1086/514080
DO - 10.1086/514080
M3 - Article
C2 - 9291305
AN - SCOPUS:0030739691
SN - 0022-1899
VL - 176
SP - 602
EP - 616
JO - Journal of Infectious Diseases
JF - Journal of Infectious Diseases
IS - 3
ER -