Abstract
We determined the nucleotide sequence of about 1,000 bases from the 3'-terminus of a small round structured virus (SRSV), which caused a gastroenteritis outbreak in Chiba Prefecture, Japan, in 1987. The sequence was compared with the corresponding sequence region of Norwalk virus; it consisted of a part of the open reading frame 2 (ORF2), whole ORF3, and 3'-noncoding region (NCR). The 624-base-long ORF3 had sequence homology of 68% with the corresponding region of Norwalk virus. (The amino acid sequence homology was 74%.) The 94-base-long NCR had 65% homology with Norwalk virus. We then selected two consensus-sequence portions in the above sequence between Chiba and Norwalk viruses for primers in the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Using this primer set, we detected 669-bp bands in agarose gel electrophoresis of RT-PCR products from feces containing Chiba or Norwalk viruses. Furthermore, in Southern hybridization with Chiba probes which were labeled with digoxigenin-dUTP in PCR, the bands of the two viruses were clearly stained under a low stringency condition. Since both Chiba and Norwalk viruses were detected by the above primer set although they are geographically and chronologically different viruses, our primer-pair may be useful for detection of a broad range of SRSVs which cause gastroenteritis in different areas.
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