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2010
DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.023994-0
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Proposals for the classification of human rhinovirus species C into genotypically assigned types

Abstract: Human rhinoviruses (HRVs) are common respiratory pathogens associated with mild upper respiratory tract infections, but also increasingly recognized in the aetiology of severe lower respiratory tract disease. Wider use of molecular diagnostics has led to a recent reappraisal of HRV genetic diversity, including the discovery of HRV species C (HRV-C), which is refractory to traditional virus isolation procedures. Although it is heterogeneous genetically, there has to date been no attempt to classify HRV-C into t… Show more

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Cited by 209 publications
(177 citation statements)
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“…Specifics of both HRV-C evolution and the two classification frameworks could play a role. The genetic diversity of these viruses in capsid (1A, also known as VP4, and 1D proteins) and nonstructural (3D) regions was previously reported to exceed those of other rhinoviruses (51,69). In the 1D protein, this difference is smallest, and the entire HRV-C diversity was considered to be below the species divergence limit, paving the way for the recognition of HRV-C as a single species.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifics of both HRV-C evolution and the two classification frameworks could play a role. The genetic diversity of these viruses in capsid (1A, also known as VP4, and 1D proteins) and nonstructural (3D) regions was previously reported to exceed those of other rhinoviruses (51,69). In the 1D protein, this difference is smallest, and the entire HRV-C diversity was considered to be below the species divergence limit, paving the way for the recognition of HRV-C as a single species.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 6 and Simmonds et al. , 4 novel HRVs may be classified following these criteria. In case of HRV‐B species, the pairwise distance, based on partial VP4‐/VP2‐coding region, falls to a minimum value of 10%.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Species C variants have not been cultured and, therefore, cannot as yet be formally assigned into separate serotypes. However, sequence data has revealed a large number of distinct genetic lineages identifiable by sequence comparisons in the VP1 and VP4/VP2 gene regions [31]. If these sequence variations correspond to major antigenic differences and different serotypes of rhinovirus C, the range of rhinovirus serotypes may be even wider than was previously thought.…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%