2005
DOI: 10.1007/s00705-005-0602-1
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Molecular epidemiology of African swine fever in East Africa

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Cited by 146 publications
(233 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
(109 reference statements)
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“…Despite this, the 42 viruses clustered within 22 discrete lineages, representative of distinct genotypes. Of these, 16 coincided with genotypes identified by distance methods in previous studies (Bastos et al, 2003 andLubisi et al, 2005), with six being novel and confined to the southern African region. The phylogeny further revealed that the 22 genotypes clustered within 3 discrete evolutionary lineages, labelled I-III ( Of the 22 genotypes recovered, 14 were associated with domestic pig outbreaks in southern Africa and 8 appear to be country-specific ( The results revealed the involvement of a genotype I (ESACWA) virus in the 1989 outbreaks occurring in Windhoek, Namibia.…”
Section: P72 Gene Phylogenysupporting
confidence: 61%
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“…Despite this, the 42 viruses clustered within 22 discrete lineages, representative of distinct genotypes. Of these, 16 coincided with genotypes identified by distance methods in previous studies (Bastos et al, 2003 andLubisi et al, 2005), with six being novel and confined to the southern African region. The phylogeny further revealed that the 22 genotypes clustered within 3 discrete evolutionary lineages, labelled I-III ( Of the 22 genotypes recovered, 14 were associated with domestic pig outbreaks in southern Africa and 8 appear to be country-specific ( The results revealed the involvement of a genotype I (ESACWA) virus in the 1989 outbreaks occurring in Windhoek, Namibia.…”
Section: P72 Gene Phylogenysupporting
confidence: 61%
“…These results contrast markedly with the recovery of identical genotype XIX viruses from the temporally unrelated (1987, 1992 and 1996) outbreaks in South Africa, indicating a prolonged field presence for this virus. As the C-terminal end of the p72 gene of viruses from domestic pig cycles in West and East Africa (genotypes I and VIII, respectively) are genetically homogeneous (Bastos et al, 2003 andLubisi et al, 2005), it raises the possibility the genotype XIX homogeneity observed here may imply the existence of a pig-restricted cycle in South Africa, in addition to the recognised sylvatic cycle, which would have serious implications for disease control (Penrith et al, in press). However, this requires further investigation as only five genotype XIX have been characterised thus far whilst in excess of 40 viruses each have been sequenced for genotypes I and VIII (Bastos et al, 2003 andLubisi et al, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…Variation in clinical disease and virus genome length and composition is known to occur, with infections in domestic swine ranging from sub-clinical to lethal and field strains having genomes up to 20 kbp longer than laboratoryadapted strains (Tulman et al, 2009). Recent molecular epidemiological studies have also uncovered substantial field heterogeneity with at least 22 genotypes being identified to date on the basis of C-terminus p72 gene sequencing (Bastos et al, 2003;Lubisi et al, 2005;Boshoff et al, 2007). The recent incursion of ASF into Georgia (Beltran Alcrudo et al, 2008;Rowlands et al, 2008) has highlighted the potential of the virus to expand its range towards Asia through the Caucasus and the Indian Ocean (Costard et al, 2009) as it encounters new populations of wild and domestic pigs, yet important gaps in our knowledge remain regarding the role of many wild Suidae in the maintenance of ASFV.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%