1. Detection and Characterization of New Influenza B Virus Variants in 2002
- Author
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Trentice V. Bolar, Wafa Al-Rimawi, Sheau-Mei Cheng, John S. Tam, Ruth Rappaport, Aizhong Hu, X. Sherry Chi, and Ping Zhao
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Lineage (genetic) ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Orthomyxoviridae ,Reassortment ,New York ,Antigenic drift ,Virus ,Virology ,Influenza, Human ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene ,DNA Primers ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Influenzavirus B ,Genetic Variation ,Infant ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Influenza B virus ,Child, Preschool ,Coinfection - Abstract
One-hundred five influenza B-positive specimens obtained from southeast Asia in 2002 were categorized on the basis of DNA sequencing of HA1 gene as well as real-time PCR analysis of the NA gene. Phylogenetic analysis of the HA1 gene sequences showed that the majority of the viruses (96.2%) belonged to the B/Victoria/2/87 lineage, while a smaller percentage of the viruses (3.8%) belonged to the B/Yamagata/16/88 lineage. The B/Yamagata/16/88 viruses displayed significant antigenic drift in the deduced amino acid sequences of the HA1 protein, and the B/Victoria/2/87-like viruses consisted of B/Hong Kong/1351/02-like (72.3%) and B/Hong Kong/330/01-like (27.7%) viruses. The B/Hong Kong/1351/02-like viruses were reassortants with the HA gene belonging to the B/Victoria/2/87 lineage and the NA gene belonging to the B/Yamagata/16/88 lineage, whereas both the HA and NA genes of B/Hong Kong/330/01 virus belonged to the B/Victoria/2/87 lineage. In this study, however, all the B/Hong Kong/330/01-like isolates exhibited the B/Yamagata/16/88-like NA gene, which likely resulted from reassortment of B/Hong Kong/330/01 and B/Hong Kong/1351/02 viruses during coinfection. Additional molecular characterization of the six internal genes showed that the M, NS, PA, and PB2 genes of the new variants were B/Hong Kong/1351/02 in origin, whereas the NP and PA genes retained the B/Hong Kong/330/01 origin. Interestingly, these new variants all appeared late in the year 2002. These results support the notion that influenza B viruses continued to evolve through antigenic drift and shift.
- Published
- 2005
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