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      Interspecies Transmission, Genetic Diversity, and Evolutionary Dynamics of Pseudorabies Virus

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          An exact nonparametric method for inferring mosaic structure in sequence triplets.

          Statistical tests for detecting mosaic structure or recombination among nucleotide sequences usually rely on identifying a pattern or a signal that would be unlikely to appear under clonal reproduction. Dozens of such tests have been described, but many are hampered by long running times, confounding of selection and recombination, and/or inability to isolate the mosaic-producing event. We introduce a test that is exact, nonparametric, rapidly computable, free of the infinite-sites assumption, able to distinguish between recombination and variation in mutation/fixation rates, and able to identify the breakpoints and sequences involved in the mosaic-producing event. Our test considers three sequences at a time: two parent sequences that may have recombined, with one or two breakpoints, to form the third sequence (the child sequence). Excess similarity of the child sequence to a candidate recombinant of the parents is a sign of recombination; we take the maximum value of this excess similarity as our test statistic Delta(m,n,b). We present a method for rapidly calculating the distribution of Delta(m,n,b) and demonstrate that it has comparable power to and a much improved running time over previous methods, especially in detecting recombination in large data sets.
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            Phylogenetic evidence for recombination in dengue virus.

            A split decomposition analysis of dengue (DEN) virus gene sequences revealed extensive networked evolution, indicative of recombination, among DEN-1 strains but not within serotypes DEN-2, DEN-3, or DEN-4. Within DEN-1, two viruses sampled from South America in the last 10 years were identified as recombinants. To map the breakpoints and test their statistical support, we developed a novel maximum likelihood method. In both recombinants, the breakpoints were found to be in similar positions, within the fusion peptide of the envelope protein, demonstrating that a single recombination event occurred prior to the divergence of these two strains. This is the first report of recombination in natural populations of dengue virus.
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              Human Endophthalmitis Caused By Pseudorabies Virus Infection, China, 2017

              We report human endophthalmitis caused by pseudorabies virus infection after exposure to sewage on a hog farm in China. High-throughput sequencing and real-time PCR of vitreous humor showed pseudorabies virus sequences. This case showed that pseudorabies virus might infect humans after direct contact with contaminants.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Infectious Diseases
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                0022-1899
                1537-6613
                June 01 2019
                May 05 2019
                December 28 2018
                June 01 2019
                May 05 2019
                December 28 2018
                : 219
                : 11
                : 1705-1715
                Affiliations
                [1 ]MOE International Joint Collaborative Research Laboratory for Animal Health & Food Safety, Jiangsu Engineering Laboratory of Animal Immunology, Institute of Immunology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Nanjing Agricultural University
                [2 ]College of Life Sciences, Nanjing Normal University, Hangzhou
                [3 ]CAS Key Laboratory of Pathogenic Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
                [4 ]MRC–University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, United Kingdom
                [5 ]Département de Microbiologie-Infectiologie et d’Immunologie, Université Laval, Québec, Canada
                [6 ]Key laboratory of Animal Virology of Ministry of Agriculture, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou
                [7 ]Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
                [8 ]Institute for Virology, Center for Infection Medicine, Veterinary Faculty, Free University Berlin, Germany
                Article
                10.1093/infdis/jiy731
                30590733
                2e46e5d2-9dbd-4154-86b8-48579e72223f
                © 2018

                https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model

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