4.4 Article

Discovery of African bat polyomaviruses and infrequent recombination in the large T antigen in the Polyomaviridae

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY
Volume 98, Issue 4, Pages 726-738

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.000737

Keywords

polyomavirus; bat; Zambia; LTAg; recombination; hot spot

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Science, Sports and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [16H06429, 16H06431, 16K21723]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
  3. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Japan (MEXT)/JSPS KAKENHI [16H05805]
  4. Japan Initiative for Global Research Network on Infectious Diseases (J-GRID)
  5. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H06429, 16H05805, 16H02863, 16H06431] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Bat species represent natural reservoirs for a number of high-consequence human pathogens. The present study investigated the diversity of polyomaviruses (PyVs) in Zambian insectivorous and fruit bat species. We describe the complete genomes from four newly proposed African bat PyV species employing the recently recommended criteria provided by the Polyomaviridae Study Group of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses. A comprehensive phylogenetic and recombination analysis was performed to determine genetic relationships and the distribution of recombination events in PyV from mammalian and avian species. The novel species of PyV from Zambian bats segregated with members of the genera Alphapolyomavirus and Betapolyomavirus, forming monophyletic clades with bat and non-human primate PyVs. Miniopterus schreibersii polyomavirus 1 and 2 segregated in a clade with South American bat PyV species, Old World monkey and chimpanzee PyVs and Human polyomavirus 13 (New Jersey PyV). Interestingly, the newly described Egyptian fruit bat PyV, tentatively named Rousettus aegyptiacus polyomavirus 1, had the highest nucleotide sequence identity to species of PyV from Indonesian fruit bats, and Rhinolophus hildebrandtii polyomavirus 1 was most closely related to New World monkey PyVs. The distribution of recombination events in PyV genomes was non-random: recombination boundaries existed in the intergene region between VP1 and LTAg and also at the 3' end of VP2/3 in the structural genes, whereas infrequent recombination was present within the LTAg gene. These findings indicate that recombination within the LTAg gene has been negatively selected against during polyomaviral evolution and support the recent proposal for taxonomic classification based on LTAg to define novel PyV species.

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