Molecular evolution of zika virus during its emergence in the 20th Century
Autor(es): Faye, Oumar; Freire, Caio C. M.; Iamarino, Atila; Faye, Ousmane; de Oliveira, Juliana Velasco C.; Diallo, Mawlouth; Zanotto, Paolo M. A.; Sall, Amadou Alpha
Resumo: Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus first isolated in Uganda in 1947. Although entomological and virologic surveillance have reported ZIKV enzootic activity in diverse countries of Africa and Asia, few human cases were reported until 2007, when a Zika fever epidemic took place in Micronesia. In the context of West Africa, the WHO Collaborating Centre for Arboviruses and Hemorrhagic Fever at Institut Pasteur of Dakar (
Palavras-Chave: Virus envelope protein; Aedes; Africa; Article; Disease re-emergence; Epidemic; Flavivirus; Glycosylation; Human; Immunofluorescence; Molecular epidemiology; Molecular evolution; Nucleotide sequence; Phylogeny; Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; RNA extraction; Virus recombination; Virus strain; Zika flavivirus; Envelope protein - Glycosylation
Imprenta: PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, v. 8, n. 1, 2014.
Descritores: Zika Virus - RNA ; Zika Virus - RNA virus ; Zika Virus - Epidemic ; Zika Virus - Epidemiology ; Zika Virus - Zika fever
Data de publicação: 2014