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Whole genome analysis of selected human and animal rotaviruses identified in Uganda from 2012 to 2014 reveals complex genome reassortment events between human, bovine, caprine and porcine strains

Whole genome analysis of selected human and animal rotaviruses identified in Uganda from 2012 to 2014 reveals complex genome reassortment events between human, bovine, caprine and porcine strains

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dc.contributor.author Bwogi, Josephine
dc.contributor.author Jere, Khuzwayo C.
dc.contributor.author Karamagi, Charles
dc.contributor.author Byarugaba, Denis K.
dc.contributor.author Namuwulya, Prossy
dc.contributor.author Baliraine, Frederick N.
dc.contributor.author Desselberger, Ulrich
dc.contributor.author Iturriza-Gomara, Miren
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-01T21:58:19Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-01T21:58:19Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 1932-6203
dc.identifier.uri http://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48259
dc.description.abstract Rotaviruses of species A (RVA) are a common cause of diarrhoea in children and the young of various other mammals and birds worldwide. To investigate possible interspecies transmission of RVAs, whole genomes of 18 human and 6 domestic animal RVA strains identified in Uganda between 2012 and 2014 were sequenced using the Illumina HiSeq platform. The backbone of the human RVA strains had either a Wa - or a DS-1-like genetic constellation. One human strain was a Wa-like mono-reassortant containing a DS-1-like VP2 gene of possible animal origin. All eleven genes of one bovine RVA strain were closely related to those of human RVAs. One caprine strain had a mixed genotype backbone, suggesting that it emerged from multiple reassortment events involving different host species. The porcine RVA strains had mixed genotype backbones with possible multiple reassortant events with strains of human and bovine origin. Overall, whole genome characterisation of rotaviruses found in domestic animals in Uganda strongly suggested the presence of human-to animal RVA transmission, with concomitant circulation of multi-reassortant strains potentially derived from complex interspecies transmission events. However, whole genome data from the human RVA strains causing moderate and severe diarrhoea in under-fives in Uganda indicated that they were primarily transmitted from person-to-person.
dc.description.sponsorship THRiVE
dc.description.sponsorship Wellcome TrustWellcome Trust [087540]
dc.description.sponsorship Cambridge Alborado Research funds
dc.description.sponsorship WHOWorld Health Organization
dc.description.sponsorship Uganda Virus Research Institute and Laboratory for Viral infections, Almaty, Kazakhstan [105508]
dc.description.sponsorship Medical Research CouncilMedical Research Council UK (MRC) [MR/K002279/1, G0900753] Funding Source: researchfish
dc.language English
dc.publisher PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
dc.relation.ispartof PLOS One
dc.title Whole genome analysis of selected human and animal rotaviruses identified in Uganda from 2012 to 2014 reveals complex genome reassortment events between human, bovine, caprine and porcine strains
dc.type Article
dc.identifier.isi 000404135800011
dc.identifier.doi 10.1371/journal.pone.0178855
dc.identifier.pmid 2868
dc.publisher.city SAN FRANCISCO
dc.publisher.address 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA
dc.identifier.volume 12
dc.identifier.issue 6
dc.subject.wc Multidisciplinary Sciences
dc.subject.sc Science & Technology - Other Topics
dc.description.oa DOAJ Gold
dc.description.oa Green Published
dc.description.pages 23
dc.subject.kwp Group-A Rotavirus
dc.subject.kwp Sequence-Independent Amplification
dc.subject.kwp Acute Diarrhea
dc.subject.kwp Molecular Characterization
dc.subject.kwp Zoonotic Transmission
dc.subject.kwp Wa-Like
dc.subject.kwp Diversity
dc.subject.kwp Children
dc.subject.kwp Epidemiology
dc.subject.kwp Classification
dc.identifier.articleno e0178855
dc.description.affiliation Uganda Virus Res Inst, EPI Lab, Entebbe, Uganda
dc.description.affiliation Makerere Univ, Dept Paediat & Child Hlth, Coll Hlth Sci, Kampala, Uganda
dc.description.affiliation Univ Liverpool, Inst Infect & Global Hlth, Dept Clin Infect Microbiol & Immunol, Liverpool, Merseyside, England
dc.description.affiliation Univ Malawi, Coll Med, Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Trust Clin Res Programm, Dept Med Lab Sci, Blantyre, Malawi
dc.description.affiliation Makerere Univ, Dept Microbiol, Coll Vet Med & Biosecur, Kampala, Uganda
dc.description.affiliation LeTourneau Univ, Dept Biol & Kinesiol, Longview, TX USA
dc.description.affiliation Univ Cambridge, Dept Med, Cambridge, England
dc.description.email josephinebwn@yahoo.co.uk
dc.description.corr Bwogi, J (corresponding author), Uganda Virus Res Inst, EPI Lab, Entebbe, Uganda.; Bwogi, J (corresponding author), Makerere Univ, Dept Paediat & Child Hlth, Coll Hlth Sci, Kampala, Uganda.
dc.description.orcid Gomara, Miren Iturriza/0000-0001-5816-6423
dc.description.orcid Jere, Khuzwayo/0000-0003-3376-8529


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