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Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus

Since 1999, several Vaccinia virus (VACV) isolates, the etiological agents of bovine vaccinia (BV), have been frequently isolated and characterized with various biological and molecular methods. The results from these approaches have grouped these VACV isolates into two different clusters. This dich...

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Autores principales: Assis, Felipe L., Almeida, Gabriel M. F., Oliveira, Danilo B., Franco-Luiz, Ana P. M., Campos, Rafael K., Guedes, Maria I. M., Fonseca, Flávio G., Trindade, Giliane S., Drumond, Betânia P., Kroon, Erna G., Abrahão, Jônatas S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3506599/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23189200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050413
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author Assis, Felipe L.
Almeida, Gabriel M. F.
Oliveira, Danilo B.
Franco-Luiz, Ana P. M.
Campos, Rafael K.
Guedes, Maria I. M.
Fonseca, Flávio G.
Trindade, Giliane S.
Drumond, Betânia P.
Kroon, Erna G.
Abrahão, Jônatas S.
author_facet Assis, Felipe L.
Almeida, Gabriel M. F.
Oliveira, Danilo B.
Franco-Luiz, Ana P. M.
Campos, Rafael K.
Guedes, Maria I. M.
Fonseca, Flávio G.
Trindade, Giliane S.
Drumond, Betânia P.
Kroon, Erna G.
Abrahão, Jônatas S.
author_sort Assis, Felipe L.
collection PubMed
description Since 1999, several Vaccinia virus (VACV) isolates, the etiological agents of bovine vaccinia (BV), have been frequently isolated and characterized with various biological and molecular methods. The results from these approaches have grouped these VACV isolates into two different clusters. This dichotomy has elicited debates surrounding the origin of the Brazilian VACV and its epidemiological significance. To ascertain vital information to settle these debates, we and other research groups have made efforts to identify molecular markers to discriminate VACV from other viruses of the genus Orthopoxvirus (OPV) and other VACV-BR groups. In this way, some genes have been identified as useful markers to discriminate between the VACV-BR groups. However, new markers are needed to infer ancestry and to correlate each sample or group with its unique epidemiological and biological features. The aims of this work were to characterize a new VACV isolate (VACV DMTV-2005) molecularly and biologically using conserved and non-conserved gene analyses for phylogenetic inference and to search for new genes that would elucidate the VACV-BR dichotomy. The VACV DMTV-2005 isolate reported in this study is biologically and phylogenetically clustered with other strains of Group 1 VACV-BR, the most prevalent VACV group that was isolated during the bovine vaccinia outbreaks in Brazil. Sequence analysis of C23L, the gene that encodes for the CC-chemokine-binding protein, revealed a ten-nucleotide deletion, which is a new Group 1 Brazilian VACV genetic marker. This deletion in the C23L open reading frame produces a premature stop-codon that is shared by all Group 1 VACV-BR strains and may also reflect the VACV-BR dichotomy; the deletion can also be considered to be a putative genetic marker for non-virulent Brazilian VACV isolates and may be used for the detection and molecular characterization of new isolates.
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spelling pubmed-35065992012-11-27 Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus Assis, Felipe L. Almeida, Gabriel M. F. Oliveira, Danilo B. Franco-Luiz, Ana P. M. Campos, Rafael K. Guedes, Maria I. M. Fonseca, Flávio G. Trindade, Giliane S. Drumond, Betânia P. Kroon, Erna G. Abrahão, Jônatas S. PLoS One Research Article Since 1999, several Vaccinia virus (VACV) isolates, the etiological agents of bovine vaccinia (BV), have been frequently isolated and characterized with various biological and molecular methods. The results from these approaches have grouped these VACV isolates into two different clusters. This dichotomy has elicited debates surrounding the origin of the Brazilian VACV and its epidemiological significance. To ascertain vital information to settle these debates, we and other research groups have made efforts to identify molecular markers to discriminate VACV from other viruses of the genus Orthopoxvirus (OPV) and other VACV-BR groups. In this way, some genes have been identified as useful markers to discriminate between the VACV-BR groups. However, new markers are needed to infer ancestry and to correlate each sample or group with its unique epidemiological and biological features. The aims of this work were to characterize a new VACV isolate (VACV DMTV-2005) molecularly and biologically using conserved and non-conserved gene analyses for phylogenetic inference and to search for new genes that would elucidate the VACV-BR dichotomy. The VACV DMTV-2005 isolate reported in this study is biologically and phylogenetically clustered with other strains of Group 1 VACV-BR, the most prevalent VACV group that was isolated during the bovine vaccinia outbreaks in Brazil. Sequence analysis of C23L, the gene that encodes for the CC-chemokine-binding protein, revealed a ten-nucleotide deletion, which is a new Group 1 Brazilian VACV genetic marker. This deletion in the C23L open reading frame produces a premature stop-codon that is shared by all Group 1 VACV-BR strains and may also reflect the VACV-BR dichotomy; the deletion can also be considered to be a putative genetic marker for non-virulent Brazilian VACV isolates and may be used for the detection and molecular characterization of new isolates. Public Library of Science 2012-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3506599/ /pubmed/23189200 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050413 Text en © 2012 Assis et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Assis, Felipe L.
Almeida, Gabriel M. F.
Oliveira, Danilo B.
Franco-Luiz, Ana P. M.
Campos, Rafael K.
Guedes, Maria I. M.
Fonseca, Flávio G.
Trindade, Giliane S.
Drumond, Betânia P.
Kroon, Erna G.
Abrahão, Jônatas S.
Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus
title Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus
title_full Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus
title_fullStr Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus
title_short Characterization of a New Vaccinia virus Isolate Reveals the C23L Gene as a Putative Genetic Marker for Autochthonous Group 1 Brazilian Vaccinia virus
title_sort characterization of a new vaccinia virus isolate reveals the c23l gene as a putative genetic marker for autochthonous group 1 brazilian vaccinia virus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3506599/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23189200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050413
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