Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.

Norovirus is the commonest cause of acute gastrointestinal disease and is the main aetiological agent of outbreaks of gastroenteritis, particularly in semi-closed environments. Norovirus infections in England typically peak between December and March each year. The most commonly detected norovirus s...

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Main Authors: David J Allen, Natalie L Adams, Farah Aladin, John P Harris, David W G Brown
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3923861?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5b07547b65994c4281d31a5a5e1f25382020-11-24T21:50:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0192e8897810.1371/journal.pone.0088978Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.David J AllenNatalie L AdamsFarah AladinJohn P HarrisDavid W G BrownNorovirus is the commonest cause of acute gastrointestinal disease and is the main aetiological agent of outbreaks of gastroenteritis, particularly in semi-closed environments. Norovirus infections in England typically peak between December and March each year. The most commonly detected norovirus strains belong to the genetically diverse genogroup-II genotype-4 (GII-4) genocluster and in the previous two norovirus winter seasons the majority of GII-4 strains in circulation worldwide have been genetically similar to the GII-4 strain New Orleans 1805/2009/USA. At the beginning of the 2012/13 season a genetically distinct GII-4 strain (Sydney 2012/NSW0514/2012/AU) was described which emerged worldwide during the winter of 2012/13. Here we describe the emergence of norovirus strains genetically related to Sydney2012 in England during the 2012/13 season to replace NewOrleans2009 strains as the most commonly detected variant of GII-4 norovirus in England. Furthermore, we demonstrate that whilst the emergence of Sydney2012 coincided with an early peak in the number of norovirus outbreaks, there was not an overall increase in norovirus activity compared to the previous season. Finally, we show that the Sydney2012 strain is associated with distinct genetic changes compared to the NewOrleans2009 strain, and these changes may have contributed to the emergence of the Sydney2012 strain.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3923861?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David J Allen
Natalie L Adams
Farah Aladin
John P Harris
David W G Brown
spellingShingle David J Allen
Natalie L Adams
Farah Aladin
John P Harris
David W G Brown
Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.
PLoS ONE
author_facet David J Allen
Natalie L Adams
Farah Aladin
John P Harris
David W G Brown
author_sort David J Allen
title Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.
title_short Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.
title_full Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.
title_fullStr Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.
title_full_unstemmed Emergence of the GII-4 Norovirus Sydney2012 strain in England, winter 2012-2013.
title_sort emergence of the gii-4 norovirus sydney2012 strain in england, winter 2012-2013.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Norovirus is the commonest cause of acute gastrointestinal disease and is the main aetiological agent of outbreaks of gastroenteritis, particularly in semi-closed environments. Norovirus infections in England typically peak between December and March each year. The most commonly detected norovirus strains belong to the genetically diverse genogroup-II genotype-4 (GII-4) genocluster and in the previous two norovirus winter seasons the majority of GII-4 strains in circulation worldwide have been genetically similar to the GII-4 strain New Orleans 1805/2009/USA. At the beginning of the 2012/13 season a genetically distinct GII-4 strain (Sydney 2012/NSW0514/2012/AU) was described which emerged worldwide during the winter of 2012/13. Here we describe the emergence of norovirus strains genetically related to Sydney2012 in England during the 2012/13 season to replace NewOrleans2009 strains as the most commonly detected variant of GII-4 norovirus in England. Furthermore, we demonstrate that whilst the emergence of Sydney2012 coincided with an early peak in the number of norovirus outbreaks, there was not an overall increase in norovirus activity compared to the previous season. Finally, we show that the Sydney2012 strain is associated with distinct genetic changes compared to the NewOrleans2009 strain, and these changes may have contributed to the emergence of the Sydney2012 strain.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3923861?pdf=render
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