Author:
Mizuta Katsumi,Saitoh Mika,Kobayashi Miho,Tsukagoshi Hiroyuki,Aoki Yoko,Ikeda Tatsuya,Abiko Chieko,Katsushima Noriko,Itagaki Tsutomu,Noda Masahiro,Kozawa Kunihisa,Ahiko Tadayuki,Kimura Hirokazu
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Human parainfluenza virus type 1 (HPIV1) causes various acute respiratory infections (ARI). Hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) glycoprotein of HPIV1 is a major antigen. However, the molecular epidemiology and genetic characteristics of such ARI are not exactly known. Recent studies suggested that a phylogenetic analysis tool, namely the maximum likelihood (ML) method, may be applied to estimate the evolutionary time scale of various viruses. Thus, we conducted detailed genetic analyses including homology analysis, phylogenetic analysis (using both the neighbor joining (NJ) and ML methods), and analysis of the pairwise distances of HN gene in HPIV1 isolated from patients with ARI in Yamagata prefecture, Japan.
Results
A few substitutions of nucleotides in the second binding site of HN gene were observed among the present isolates. The strains were classified into two major clusters in the phylogenetic tree by the NJ method. Another phylogenetic tree constructed by the ML method showed that the strains diversified in the late 1980s. No positively selected sites were found in the present strains. Moreover, the pairwise distance among the present isolates was relatively short.
Conclusions
The evolution of HN gene in the present HPIV1 isolates was relatively slow. The ML method may be a useful phylogenetic method to estimate the evolutionary time scale of HPIV and other viruses.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Virology
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