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Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution

A thorough search for bat herpesviruses was carried out in oropharyngeal samples taken from most of the bat species present in the Iberian Peninsula from the Vespertilionidae, Miniopteridae, Molossidae and Rhinolophidae families, in addition to a colony of captive fruit bats from the Pteropodidae fa...

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Autores principales: Pozo, Francisco, Juste, Javier, Vázquez-Morón, Sonia, Aznar-López, Carolina, Ibáñez, Carlos, Garin, Inazio, Aihartza, Joxerra, Casas, Inmaculada, Tenorio, Antonio, Echevarría, Juan Emilio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5201282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28036408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169153
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author Pozo, Francisco
Juste, Javier
Vázquez-Morón, Sonia
Aznar-López, Carolina
Ibáñez, Carlos
Garin, Inazio
Aihartza, Joxerra
Casas, Inmaculada
Tenorio, Antonio
Echevarría, Juan Emilio
author_facet Pozo, Francisco
Juste, Javier
Vázquez-Morón, Sonia
Aznar-López, Carolina
Ibáñez, Carlos
Garin, Inazio
Aihartza, Joxerra
Casas, Inmaculada
Tenorio, Antonio
Echevarría, Juan Emilio
author_sort Pozo, Francisco
collection PubMed
description A thorough search for bat herpesviruses was carried out in oropharyngeal samples taken from most of the bat species present in the Iberian Peninsula from the Vespertilionidae, Miniopteridae, Molossidae and Rhinolophidae families, in addition to a colony of captive fruit bats from the Pteropodidae family. By using two degenerate consensus PCR methods targeting two conserved genes, distinct and previously unrecognized bat-hosted herpesviruses were identified for the most of the tested species. All together a total of 42 potentially novel bat herpesviruses were partially characterized. Thirty-two of them were tentatively assigned to the Betaherpesvirinae subfamily while the remaining 10 were allocated into the Gammaherpesvirinae subfamily. Significant diversity was observed among the novel sequences when compared with type herpesvirus species of the ICTV-approved genera. The inferred phylogenetic relationships showed that most of the betaherpesviruses sequences fell into a well-supported unique monophyletic clade and support the recognition of a new betaherpesvirus genus. This clade is subdivided into three major clades, corresponding to the families of bats studied. This supports the hypothesis of a species-specific parallel evolution process between the potentially new betaherpesviruses and their bat hosts. Interestingly, two of the betaherpesviruses’ sequences detected in rhinolophid bats clustered together apart from the rest, closely related to viruses that belong to the Roseolovirus genus. This suggests a putative third roseolo lineage. On the contrary, no phylogenetic structure was detected among several potentially novel bat-hosted gammaherpesviruses found in the study. Remarkably, all of the possible novel bat herpesviruses described in this study are linked to a unique bat species.
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spelling pubmed-52012822017-01-19 Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution Pozo, Francisco Juste, Javier Vázquez-Morón, Sonia Aznar-López, Carolina Ibáñez, Carlos Garin, Inazio Aihartza, Joxerra Casas, Inmaculada Tenorio, Antonio Echevarría, Juan Emilio PLoS One Research Article A thorough search for bat herpesviruses was carried out in oropharyngeal samples taken from most of the bat species present in the Iberian Peninsula from the Vespertilionidae, Miniopteridae, Molossidae and Rhinolophidae families, in addition to a colony of captive fruit bats from the Pteropodidae family. By using two degenerate consensus PCR methods targeting two conserved genes, distinct and previously unrecognized bat-hosted herpesviruses were identified for the most of the tested species. All together a total of 42 potentially novel bat herpesviruses were partially characterized. Thirty-two of them were tentatively assigned to the Betaherpesvirinae subfamily while the remaining 10 were allocated into the Gammaherpesvirinae subfamily. Significant diversity was observed among the novel sequences when compared with type herpesvirus species of the ICTV-approved genera. The inferred phylogenetic relationships showed that most of the betaherpesviruses sequences fell into a well-supported unique monophyletic clade and support the recognition of a new betaherpesvirus genus. This clade is subdivided into three major clades, corresponding to the families of bats studied. This supports the hypothesis of a species-specific parallel evolution process between the potentially new betaherpesviruses and their bat hosts. Interestingly, two of the betaherpesviruses’ sequences detected in rhinolophid bats clustered together apart from the rest, closely related to viruses that belong to the Roseolovirus genus. This suggests a putative third roseolo lineage. On the contrary, no phylogenetic structure was detected among several potentially novel bat-hosted gammaherpesviruses found in the study. Remarkably, all of the possible novel bat herpesviruses described in this study are linked to a unique bat species. Public Library of Science 2016-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5201282/ /pubmed/28036408 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169153 Text en © 2016 Pozo 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pozo, Francisco
Juste, Javier
Vázquez-Morón, Sonia
Aznar-López, Carolina
Ibáñez, Carlos
Garin, Inazio
Aihartza, Joxerra
Casas, Inmaculada
Tenorio, Antonio
Echevarría, Juan Emilio
Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution
title Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution
title_full Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution
title_fullStr Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution
title_full_unstemmed Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution
title_short Identification of Novel Betaherpesviruses in Iberian Bats Reveals Parallel Evolution
title_sort identification of novel betaherpesviruses in iberian bats reveals parallel evolution
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5201282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28036408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169153
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