Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2012)

Ocozocoautla de Espinosa Virus and Hemorrhagic Fever, Mexico

  • Maria N.B. Cajimat,
  • Mary Louise Milazzo,
  • Robert D. Bradley,
  • Charles F. Fulhorst

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1803.111602
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
pp. 401 – 405

Abstract

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Arenavirus RNA was isolated from Mexican deer mice (Peromyscus mexicanus) captured near the site of a 1967 epidemic of hemorrhagic fever in southern Mexico. Analyses of nucleotide and amino acid sequence data indicated that the deer mice were infected with a novel Tacaribe serocomplex virus (proposed name Ocozocoautla de Espinosa virus), which is phylogenetically closely related to Tacaribe serocomplex viruses that cause hemorrhagic fever in humans in South America.

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