My thanks to Dr Stephen Gunther for answering my email and giving permission to list these names. They should be on Genbank now he tells me (I have not found them as yet). We now know that these virus variants of the species Zaire ebolavirus are called:
- Ebola virus H.sapiens-wt/GIN/2014/Gueckedou-C05
GenBank accession number: KJ660346, KJ660347 or KJ660348 - Ebola virus H.sapiens-wt/GIN/2014/Gueckedou-C07
GenBank accession number: KJ660346, KJ660347 or KJ660348 - Ebola virus H.sapiens-wt/GIN/2014/Kissidougou-C15
GenBank accession number: KJ660346, KJ660347 or KJ660348
See more one the way the Filioviridae Study Group prefers to name ebolaviruses in a recent post here.[2]
On the issue of whether these variants can still be detected using published diagnostic PCRs, the answer is yes they can (they were detected using them after all!). To look more closely at that, I aligned the 3 new full genomes and also the primer sequences for 2 diagnostic reverse-transcription real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-rtPCR) assays mentioned in the NEJM article by Baize and colleagues [3,4]. They target the nucleoprotein (NP; [4]) region of the genome and the glycoprotein (GP; [3])
References...
- Emergence of Zaire Ebola Virus Disease in Guinea � Preliminary Report
http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa1404505 - http://newsmedicalnet.blogspot.com.au/2014/04/update-on-ebola-virus-disease-evd-case_17.html
- Development and Evaluation of a Fluorogenic 5 ' Nuclease Assay To Detect and Differentiate between Ebola Virus Subtypes Zaire and Sudan | Gibb and colleagues | J Clin Microbiol. 2001 p4125-30
http://jcm.asm.org/content/39/11/4125.full.pdf+html - Rapid detection of filoviruses by real-time TaqMan polymerase chain reaction assays.| Huang and colleagues | Virologica sinica 2012 p273-7
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23001480