1. Emergence of the Asian genotype of DENV-1 in South India.
- Author
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Cecilia, D., Patil, J.A., Kakade, M.B., Walimbe, A., Alagarasu, K., Anukumar, B., and Abraham, A.
- Subjects
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DENGUE , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *PHYLOGENY , *SEROTYPES , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
A large outbreak of dengue occurred in Tamil Nadu, South India in 2012 with 12,000 cases and CFR of 0.5%. Molecular characterization of virus present in the sera of dengue patients was undertaken to determine if there were changes in the virus population. All four serotypes were circulating but DENV-1 was dominant, present in 52% of the serotyped samples. Furthermore, the genotype of only DENV-1 had changed; the Asian genotype had displaced the American/African. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the Asian genotype was introduced from Singapore and shared 99% similarity with viruses, associated with large outbreaks in Singapore and Sri Lanka. We report for the first time the emergence of the Asian genotype of DENV-1 in southern India causing an extensive and severe outbreak. The study proves how movement of DENV can affect dengue outbreaks and underscores the need for close molecular monitoring of DENV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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