Publications by authors named "J B Jaftha"

Relative to the developed world, rabies has been poorly studied in the vast African continent. The southern African countries of Zimbabwe and South Africa, however, are known to sustain a great diversity of lyssaviruses, with large biological variations amongst genotype 1 (rabies viruses) at present more apparent here than elsewhere on the continent. One recognized biotype of rabies virus in the subcontinent appears to be specifically adapted to a variety of mongooses, belonging to the Viverrinae subfamily (family Herpestidae) and are commonly referred to as viverrid viruses, although the term mongoose rabies would be more correct, considering the taxonomic status of the host species involved.

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Four decades of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] cultivation in South Africa has resulted in the establishment of populations of bradyrhizobia against which the recently introduced inoculant strain CB 1809 must compete.

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Root nodule isolates from a shrubby legume, Lotononis bainesii, were characterized by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and morphologically by substrate utilization patterns. The symbiotic genome of these isolates was analysed by partial sequencing of the nifH gene. Based on the results of numerical taxonomy, the isolates formed a closely related cluster, showing no correspondence to any of the known rhizobial clusters.

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Mokola virus, one of the six genotypes within the Lyssavirus genus of the Rhabdoviridae family, is believed to be exclusive to the African continent, where infections in various mammal species have been reported. After an isolation of Mokola virus at Umhlanga on the east coast of South Africa in 1970, the virus was not reported in South Africa until its reappearance in 1995. Since then a total of six new isolates of the virus were made, three from the East London region in 1995 and 1996, two near Pinetown in 1997 and a further isolate in a residential suburb of the city of Pietermaritzburg, in 1998.

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Antigenic and nucleotide sequence analyses have shown that two distinct biotypes of rabies virus are circulating in South Africa. One of these typically infects members of the family Canidae, while the other comprises a heterogeneous group of apparently indigenous viruses, infecting members of the Viverridae family. In recent times, it has become evident that a considerable amount of cross-infection may occur and the manifestation of viverrid rabies in non-viverrid animals in particular appears to have become more commonplace.

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