Author(s):
Naccache, Samia N ; Th?z?, Julien ; Sardi, Silvia I ; Somasekar, Sneha ; Greninger, Alexander L ; Bandeira, Antonio C ; Campos, Gubio S ; Tauro, Laura B ; Faria, Nuno R ; Pybus, Oliver G ; Chiu, Charles Y
Date: 2017
Origin: Oasisbr
Subject(s): Infec??o pelo Zika virus / virologia; Zika virus / isolamento & purifica??o; Zika virus / gen?tica; Sequ?ncia de Bases; Genoma Viral; Filogenia; Rea??o em Cadeia da Polimerase Via Transcriptase Reversa / m?todos; Brasil (BR)
Description
University of California San Francisco. San Francisco, California, USA.
University of Oxford. Oxford, UK.
Federal University of Bahia. Salvador, BA, Brasil.
University of California San Francisco. San Francisco, California, USA.
University of Washington. Seattle, Washington, USA.
Hospital Alian?a. Salvador, BA, Brasil.
Federal University of Bahia. Salvador, BA, Brasil.
Funda??o Gon?alo Moniz. Centro de Pesquisas Gon?alo Moniz. Salvador, BA, Brasil.
Minist?rio da Sa?de. Secretaria de Vigil?ncia em Sa?de. Instituto Evandro Chagas. Ananindeua, PA, Brasil.
University of Oxford. Oxford, UK.
University of California San Francisco. San Francisco, California, USA.
Sequencing of isolates from patients in Bahia, Brazil, where most Zika virus cases in Brazil have been reported, resulted in 11 whole and partial Zika virus genomes. Phylogenetic analyses revealed a well-supported Bahia-specific Zika virus lineage, which indicates sustained Zika virus circulation in Salvador, Bahia's capital city, since mid-2014 .