Author: Lee, Wanâ€Ji; Chung, Yoonâ€Seok; Yoon, Hee Sook; Kang, Chun; Kim, Kisoon
Title: Prevalence and molecular epidemiology of human coronavirus HKU1 in patients with acute respiratory illness Cord-id: snra23sy Document date: 2012_11_14
ID: snra23sy
Snippet: In 2005, human coronavirus HKU1 (HCoVâ€HKU1) was isolated and identified from a 71â€yearâ€old man with pneumonia in Hong Kong. To identify and classify genotypes of HCoVâ€HKU1 in Korea, a sensitive, specific, and quantitative realâ€time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was developed and analyzed the sequences of HCoVâ€HKU1 isolated in Korea. A total of 1,985 respiratory specimens taken from patients with acute respiratory illness were tested for HCoVâ€HKU1 from January 2007 to May 20
Document: In 2005, human coronavirus HKU1 (HCoVâ€HKU1) was isolated and identified from a 71â€yearâ€old man with pneumonia in Hong Kong. To identify and classify genotypes of HCoVâ€HKU1 in Korea, a sensitive, specific, and quantitative realâ€time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was developed and analyzed the sequences of HCoVâ€HKU1 isolated in Korea. A total of 1,985 respiratory specimens taken from patients with acute respiratory illness were tested for HCoVâ€HKU1 from January 2007 to May 2008. The major clinical symptoms associated with HCoVâ€HKU1 infection were examined statistically and sequence variations of the RNAâ€dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp), spike, and nucleocapsid genes were also analyzed. Fifty cases (2.5%) HCoVâ€HKU1 were identified by realâ€time PCR and viral loads ranged from 6.7 × 10(4) to 1.6 × 10(9) copies/ml. The clinical symptoms of HCoVâ€HKU1 infection included rhinorrhea (72%), cough (64%), nasal congestion (56%), fever (32%), sputum (30%), sore throat (18%), chills (16%), postnasal discharge (14%), and tonsillar hypertrophy (10%). There was a seasonal distribution of HCoVâ€HKU1 infection, peaking in winter and spring. Both genotypes A and B were detected but no recombination between them was found. This is the first report on the identification and genotyping of HCoVâ€HKU1 as a causative agent of acute respiratory illness in Korea. The data suggest that at least two genotypes, A and B, of HCoVâ€HKU1 with scattered silent mutations were circulating in Korea from 2007 to 2008. J. Med. Virol. 85:309–314, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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