4.6 Article

Phylogeography and evolutionary dynamics analysis of porcine delta-coronavirus with host expansion to humans

Journal

TRANSBOUNDARY AND EMERGING DISEASES
Volume 69, Issue 5, Pages E1670-E1681

Publisher

WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1111/tbed.14503

Keywords

cross-species; evolution; PDCoV; phylogeography

Funding

  1. Key Laboratory of Zoonosis Prevention and Control of Guangdong Province
  2. Guangdong Province Pig Industrial System Innovation Team [2018LM1103]
  3. Key-Area R&D Program of GuangDong Province [2021B0707010009]
  4. Major Program of Zhaoqing Branch Center of Guangdong Laboratory for Lingnan Modern Agricultural Science and Technology [P20211154-0101]
  5. Guangdong Provincial Department of Sci. Tech. [2020B0202080004]
  6. Guangzhou Sci. Tech. Bureau [202103000096]
  7. Maoming Laboratory [2021ZZ003]
  8. Guangdong Academy of Agr. Sci. [R2020PY-JC001, R2018PY-JX003]

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This study analyzed the origin and transmission of Porcine Delta Coronavirus (PDCoV) and identified significant mutation sites. The research suggests that PDCoV might originate in Asia and has the potential for cross-species transmission. The findings are significant for understanding the zoonotic potential of PDCoV and enhancing biosecurity precautions.
From 2003 onwards, three pandemics have been caused by coronaviruses: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV); middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV); and, most recently, SARS-CoV-2. Notably, all three were transmitted from animals to humans. This would suggest that animals are potential sources of epidemics for humans. The emerging porcine delta-coronavirus was reported to infect children. This is a red flag that marks the ability of PDCoV to break barriers of cross-species transmission to humans. Therefore, we conducted molecular genetic analysis of global clade PDCoV to characterize spatiotemporal patterns of viral diffusion and genetic diversity. PDCoV was classified into three major lineages, according to distribution and phylogenetic analysis of PDCoV. It can be inferred based on the analysis results of the currently known PDCoV strains that PDCoV might originate in Asia. We also selected six special spike amino acid sequences to align and analyze to find seven significant mutation sites. The accumulation of these mutations may enhance dynamic movements, accelerating spike protein membrane fusion events and transmission. Altogether, our study offers a novel insight into the diversification, evolution, and interspecies transmission and origin of PDCoV and emphasizes the need to study the zoonotic potential of the PDCoV and comprehensive surveillance and enhanced biosecurity precautions for PDCoV.

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