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Volume 13, Number 6—June 2007
Dispatch

Emergence of Serotype G12 Rotaviruses, Hungary

Krisztián Bányai*†Comments to Author , Ágnes Bogdán*, Péter Kisfali†, Péter Molnár‡, Ilona Mihály‡, Béla Melegh†, Vito Martella§, Jon R. Gentsch¶, and György Szücs*†
Author affiliations: *Baranya County Institute of State Public Health Service, Pécs, Hungary; †University of Pécs, Hungary; ‡”St. Laszlo” Central Hospital for Infectious Diseases, Budapest, Hungary; §University of Bari, Bari, Italy; ¶Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;

Main Article

Figure 2

Phylogenetic relationship among Hungarian and other G12 rotaviruses. The tree was generated by the neighbor-joining algorithm by using a 501-nt fragment of VP7 (nt 79–579). Scale bar represents the nucleotide distance. Bootstrap values >60% are shown in the branch nodes. The country of origin is shown parallel to the strain names. ARG strain is an unnamed G12 isolate from Argentina.

Figure 2. Phylogenetic relationship among Hungarian and other G12 rotaviruses. The tree was generated by the neighbor-joining algorithm by using a 501-nt fragment of VP7 (nt 79–579). Scale bar represents the nucleotide distance. Bootstrap values >60% are shown in the branch nodes. The country of origin is shown parallel to the strain names. ARG strain is an unnamed G12 isolate from Argentina.

Main Article

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Page updated: June 30, 2010
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