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MW polyomavirus and STL polyomavirus present in tonsillar tissues from children with chronic tonsillar disease J. Peng, K. Li, C. Zhang, Q. Jin Clinical Microbiology and Infection Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 97.e1-97.e3 (January 2016) DOI: /j.cmi Copyright © 2015 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 1 Neighbour-joining phylogenetic tree of MW polyomavirus and STL polyomavirus generated by MEGA 6. The bootstrap values are shown as percentages of 1000 replicates for the major lineages within the trees. (a) MW polyomavirus tree based on 21 whole genome sequences. Y96 is from children with chronic tonsillar disease in this study. Other sequences were obtained from GenBank (NC_018102, JQ898292, JX262162, JX259273, KC549586–KC549594KC549586KC549587KC549588KC549589KC549590KC549591KC549592KC549593KC549594, KC571700–KC571705KC571700KC571701KC571702KC571703KC571704KC571705, and KC690147). (b) STL polyomavirus tree based on the partial nucleotide sequences of large T antigen (431nt). Y57 is from children with chronic tonsillar disease in this study. Other sequences were obtained from GenBank (JX463183–JX463192JX463183JX463184JX463185JX463186JX463187JX463188JX463189JX463190JX463191JX463192, KF525270, KF530304, and KM893862). The isolates labelled with dark triangles, dark squares and dark circles are the original isolates, the isolates obtained in our previous studies, and the isolates in this study, respectively. Clinical Microbiology and Infection , 97.e1-97.e3DOI: ( /j.cmi ) Copyright © 2015 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Terms and Conditions
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