1. Foot‐and‐mouth disease outbreaks due to an exotic virus serotype A lineage (A/AFRICA/G‐IV) in Algeria in 2017
- Author
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Arianna Bregoli, Donald P. King, Nick J. Knowles, Ilaria Barbieri, Nadera Bouayed, Emiliana Brocchi, Amel Omani, Hafsa Madani, Jemma Wadsworth, Hassiba Sadaoui, Giulia Pezzoni, K. Bachanek-Bankowska, and Santina Grazioli
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Serotype ,Lineage (genetic) ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Cattle Diseases ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Disease ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Serogroup ,Virus ,Disease Outbreaks ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Antigens, Viral ,Phylogeny ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Foot-and-mouth disease ,Phylogenetic tree ,Outbreak ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,030104 developmental biology ,Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus ,Algeria ,Foot-and-Mouth Disease ,RNA, Viral ,Capsid Proteins ,Cattle ,Female - Abstract
This study describes the genetic characterization of serotype A viruses collected during outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) that occurred in Algeria in 2017. These are the first reports of clinical cases due to this serotype in the country since 1977. One complete genomic sequence (comprising 8,119 nucleotides) and three additional near-complete genomic sequences were generated. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that these viruses were classified within the A/AFRICA/G-IV lineage, most closely related to viruses circulating in Nigeria between 2009 and 2015. These unexpected results motivate further studies to define the precise pathways by which this viral lineage has been introduced into North Africa in order to understand risks of future disease incursions into the region.
- Published
- 2018
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