Abstract
Summary Since the winter of 1990/91 respiratory disease of poultry in Great Britain has commonly been associated with the 793/B (or 4/91) serotype of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV). We have sequenced a variable part of the S1 region of the spike protein (5) gene. Comparison of up to 270 nucleotides of 12 British 793/B isolates, obtained in 1991 and 1993, revealed 94 to 100% nucleotide identity with each other. Eleven of them fell into one of two subgroups, A and B, one isolate forming subgroup C. Identity within subgroups A and B was > 98%. The whole S1 gene sequence (1617 nucleotides) was determined for five 793/B isolates, two from each of subgroups A and B and one from subgroup C; nucleotide identity between any two isolates was > 97%. A large proportion of the nucleotide differences corresponded to amino acid changes. The whole S1 amino acid sequence differed by 21 to 25% or more from that of all other published IBV sequences. This extensive difference has probably contributed to the persistence of the 793/B serotype in Britain even though het‐erologous vaccines have been used. The finding that the 793/B isolates could be placed into three subgroups suggests that either (a) they had diverged from a common progenitor present, but undetected, in Britain prior to 1990/91 or (b) at least three different strains of the 793/B serotype had entered Britain in or prior to 1990/91.
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