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Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections

Arenaviruses are one of the largest families of human hemorrhagic fever viruses and are known to infect both mammals and snakes. Arenaviruses package a large (L) and small (S) genome segment in their virions. For segmented RNA viruses like these, novel genotypes can be generated through mutation, re...

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Autores principales: Stenglein, Mark D., Jacobson, Elliott R., Chang, Li-Wen, Sanders, Chris, Hawkins, Michelle G., Guzman, David S-M., Drazenovich, Tracy, Dunker, Freeland, Kamaka, Elizabeth K., Fisher, Debbie, Reavill, Drury R., Meola, Linda F., Levens, Gregory, DeRisi, Joseph L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4438980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25993603
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004900
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author Stenglein, Mark D.
Jacobson, Elliott R.
Chang, Li-Wen
Sanders, Chris
Hawkins, Michelle G.
Guzman, David S-M.
Drazenovich, Tracy
Dunker, Freeland
Kamaka, Elizabeth K.
Fisher, Debbie
Reavill, Drury R.
Meola, Linda F.
Levens, Gregory
DeRisi, Joseph L.
author_facet Stenglein, Mark D.
Jacobson, Elliott R.
Chang, Li-Wen
Sanders, Chris
Hawkins, Michelle G.
Guzman, David S-M.
Drazenovich, Tracy
Dunker, Freeland
Kamaka, Elizabeth K.
Fisher, Debbie
Reavill, Drury R.
Meola, Linda F.
Levens, Gregory
DeRisi, Joseph L.
author_sort Stenglein, Mark D.
collection PubMed
description Arenaviruses are one of the largest families of human hemorrhagic fever viruses and are known to infect both mammals and snakes. Arenaviruses package a large (L) and small (S) genome segment in their virions. For segmented RNA viruses like these, novel genotypes can be generated through mutation, recombination, and reassortment. Although it is believed that an ancient recombination event led to the emergence of a new lineage of mammalian arenaviruses, neither recombination nor reassortment has been definitively documented in natural arenavirus infections. Here, we used metagenomic sequencing to survey the viral diversity present in captive arenavirus-infected snakes. From 48 infected animals, we determined the complete or near complete sequence of 210 genome segments that grouped into 23 L and 11 S genotypes. The majority of snakes were multiply infected, with up to 4 distinct S and 11 distinct L segment genotypes in individual animals. This S/L imbalance was typical: in all cases intrahost L segment genotypes outnumbered S genotypes, and a particular S segment genotype dominated in individual animals and at a population level. We corroborated sequencing results by qRT-PCR and virus isolation, and isolates replicated as ensembles in culture. Numerous instances of recombination and reassortment were detected, including recombinant segments with unusual organizations featuring 2 intergenic regions and superfluous content, which were capable of stable replication and transmission despite their atypical structures. Overall, this represents intrahost diversity of an extent and form that goes well beyond what has been observed for arenaviruses or for viruses in general. This diversity can be plausibly attributed to the captive intermingling of sub-clinically infected wild-caught snakes. Thus, beyond providing a unique opportunity to study arenavirus evolution and adaptation, these findings allow the investigation of unintended anthropogenic impacts on viral ecology, diversity, and disease potential.
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spelling pubmed-44389802015-05-29 Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections Stenglein, Mark D. Jacobson, Elliott R. Chang, Li-Wen Sanders, Chris Hawkins, Michelle G. Guzman, David S-M. Drazenovich, Tracy Dunker, Freeland Kamaka, Elizabeth K. Fisher, Debbie Reavill, Drury R. Meola, Linda F. Levens, Gregory DeRisi, Joseph L. PLoS Pathog Research Article Arenaviruses are one of the largest families of human hemorrhagic fever viruses and are known to infect both mammals and snakes. Arenaviruses package a large (L) and small (S) genome segment in their virions. For segmented RNA viruses like these, novel genotypes can be generated through mutation, recombination, and reassortment. Although it is believed that an ancient recombination event led to the emergence of a new lineage of mammalian arenaviruses, neither recombination nor reassortment has been definitively documented in natural arenavirus infections. Here, we used metagenomic sequencing to survey the viral diversity present in captive arenavirus-infected snakes. From 48 infected animals, we determined the complete or near complete sequence of 210 genome segments that grouped into 23 L and 11 S genotypes. The majority of snakes were multiply infected, with up to 4 distinct S and 11 distinct L segment genotypes in individual animals. This S/L imbalance was typical: in all cases intrahost L segment genotypes outnumbered S genotypes, and a particular S segment genotype dominated in individual animals and at a population level. We corroborated sequencing results by qRT-PCR and virus isolation, and isolates replicated as ensembles in culture. Numerous instances of recombination and reassortment were detected, including recombinant segments with unusual organizations featuring 2 intergenic regions and superfluous content, which were capable of stable replication and transmission despite their atypical structures. Overall, this represents intrahost diversity of an extent and form that goes well beyond what has been observed for arenaviruses or for viruses in general. This diversity can be plausibly attributed to the captive intermingling of sub-clinically infected wild-caught snakes. Thus, beyond providing a unique opportunity to study arenavirus evolution and adaptation, these findings allow the investigation of unintended anthropogenic impacts on viral ecology, diversity, and disease potential. Public Library of Science 2015-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4438980/ /pubmed/25993603 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004900 Text en © 2015 Stenglein 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
Stenglein, Mark D.
Jacobson, Elliott R.
Chang, Li-Wen
Sanders, Chris
Hawkins, Michelle G.
Guzman, David S-M.
Drazenovich, Tracy
Dunker, Freeland
Kamaka, Elizabeth K.
Fisher, Debbie
Reavill, Drury R.
Meola, Linda F.
Levens, Gregory
DeRisi, Joseph L.
Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections
title Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections
title_full Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections
title_fullStr Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections
title_full_unstemmed Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections
title_short Widespread Recombination, Reassortment, and Transmission of Unbalanced Compound Viral Genotypes in Natural Arenavirus Infections
title_sort widespread recombination, reassortment, and transmission of unbalanced compound viral genotypes in natural arenavirus infections
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4438980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25993603
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004900
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