Genetic relationships of 50 SAT-1 type foot-and-mouth disease viruses were
determined by phylogenetic analysis of an homologous 417 nucleotide region
encoding the C-terminal half of the VP1 gene and part of the 2A segment. Vi
ruses obtained from persistently-infected African buffalo populations were
selected in order to assess the regional genetic variation within the host
species and compared with ten viruses recovered from recent and historical
cases of clinical infection. Phylogenetic reconstructions identified three
independently evolving buffalo virus lineages within southern Africa, that
correspond with the following discrete geographic localities: (1) South Afr
ica and southern Zimbabwe, (2) Namibia, Botswana and western Zimbabwe, and
(3) Zambia, Malawi and northern Zimbabwe. This strict geographic grouping o
f viruses derived from buffalo was shown to be useful for determining the o
rigin of recent SAT 1 epizootics in livestock.
The percentage of conserved amino acid sites across the 50 SAT-1 viruses co
mpared in this study was 50%. Most mutations were clustered within three di
screte hypervariable regions, which coincide with the immunogenic G-H loop,
H-I loop and C-terminus region of the protein. Despite the high levels of
variation within the primary sequence, secondary structural features appear
to be conserved.