Newcastle disease was suspected in 37 commercial poultry farms, including 12 layer and 25 broiler farms in four districts of Gujarat, India. Vaccination had been done in 32 (20 broilers and 12 layers) farms. Tissue samples from each farm were pooled as one sample. In egg embryo inoculation, HA-HI and PCR, respectively, 32/37, 29/37, and 24/37 samples were found positive. Pathotyping by mean death time calculation and primer combination PCR revealed velogenic NDV, which was later confirmed with the presence of the 112-RRQKR*F-117 sequence at the F protein cleavage site. Phylogenetic analysis of full F gene sequences (N=10) confirmed the presence of sub-genotype VII.2 in 9/10 sequences, and genotype II in one sample. These 9 sequences were only 0.7 to 2.6 % divergent with two VII.2 (=VIIi) sequences (HQ697254.1 chicken/Banjarmas/Indonesia and KU862293.1 Parakeet/Karachi/Pakistan) but had 2.2 to 3.6 % diversion from two VII.2 sequences (OR185447 and MZ546197) from India. Then branching was found from sequences of VIIh, VIIk (VII.2), and VIIa (VII.1.2), and then from sub-genotypes VII.1.1 and VII.1.2. Due to less than 5 % diversion, these sequences could not be qualified as new sub-genotype in evolutionary distance analysis. At the amino acid level, our sequences had aa N-T-I-A-L-T at 24–79-125–385-445–482. Whereas at the same positions, in most of the retrieved VII.2 sequences and vaccines, the sequence was S-A-V-T-Q/I- E/A. Two sequences revealed additional six and four amino acid differences,respectively.This indicates rapid continuous genetic evolution of sub-genotype VII.2 and partially explains vaccinal immunity escape.
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