Abstract

Many rotavirus strains have been detected but few have been grown in vitro and this has hampered the development of serologic tests and antigenic comparison of strains obtained from the same or different host species. Because of this limitation of growth in vitro a different approach for distinguishing rotaviruses was undertaken. The rotavirus genome could be separated into 11 discrete RNA segments by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Differences in RNA migration pattern were observed among human strains as well as between human and animal strains; the number of interspecies differences was greater than the number of intraspecies differences. Three distinct patterns were observed among the eight human rotaviruses obtained from each of four successive annual rotavirus epidemics in the Washington, D.C. area. Each of four animal rotaviruses also had distinct patterns which differed from the human patterns in the mobility of from four to seven RNA segments.

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