G2 strain of rotavirus among infants and children, Bangladesh.

Emerging Infectious Diseases
Shuvra Kanti DeyHiroshi Ushijima

Abstract

To determine G and P genotypes, we performed nested PCR on 307 rotavirus specimens collected in Dhaka, Bangladesh, during 2004-2005. G2 (43.3%) was detected at the highest frequency, followed by G4 (19.5%), G9 (13.7%), G1 (12.7%), and G3 (2.6%). P[8] was the most predominant genotype (53.2%), followed by P[4] (42.9%).

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Citations

Mar 11, 2010·Virus Genes·Kamruddin AhmedOsamu Nakagomi
Feb 6, 2010·The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal·Shuvra K DeyYoshimi Ota
Oct 4, 2015·Infection, Genetics and Evolution : Journal of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics in Infectious Diseases·Somayeh JalilvandZabihollah Shoja
Oct 1, 2013·The Journal of General Virology·Giovanni M GiammancoSimona De Grazia
Nov 29, 2012·Infection, Genetics and Evolution : Journal of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics in Infectious Diseases·S TamimS S Z Zaidi
Jul 9, 2013·Infection, Genetics and Evolution : Journal of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics in Infectious Diseases·Maria Hemming, Timo Vesikari
Jan 30, 2010·Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy·Evan J Anderson
Feb 15, 2013·The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal·Yu ChenWeizhong Yang
Jan 5, 2019·Food and Environmental Virology·Sheikh Ariful HoqueHiroshi Ushijima

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
reverse transcription–PCR
genotyping
PCR
electrophoresis

Software Mentioned

BLAST
MEGA

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