Department of Microbiology, University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Lahore 54600, Pakistan; Quality Operations Laboratory, University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, 54600 Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3342-4462.
Division of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Furness College, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YG, United Kingdom. Electronic address: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4038-0370.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2018 Oct;127:931-951. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.06.040. Epub 2018 Jun 26.
Avian avulaviruses (avulaviruses or AAvVs) infect a wide range of avian species worldwide with variable clinical outcomes and economic impacts. Owing to broad host spectrum, several novel avulaviruses are being reported from both wild and domesticated birds that highlight the potential of the virus to evolve, adapt and emerge in susceptible population. Pathobiological and phylogenetic characterizations of individual avulaviruses are often demonstrated, however, a cumulative and comparative assessment of avulaviruses remains elusive. To assess evolutionary dynamics and potential emergence of novel avulaviruses, we enriched existing databases of all known avulaviruses (specie-type 1-20), and determined their genomics features based on both complete genomes and individual complete genes. While a high nucleotide divergence (up to 65.4%) was observed among avulaviruses, phylogenomic analysis revealed clustering of all avulaviruses into three distinct clades. The major clade (Clade-I) included both oldest and newest avulaviruses (2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 14, 15 and 20) and the second clade (Clade-II) consisted of avulaviruses 1, 9, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18 and 19, whereas the third clade (Clade-III) carried only avulaviruses 3 and 4. Intriguingly, clustering pattern was descriptive for individual gene-based analysis, however, the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) and polymerase (L) genes showed clear and discrete branching patterns similar to complete genome-based clustering. Therefore, we propose the use of HN, or L genes or complete genome to study epidemiological aspects of the avulaviruses. Genomic and residue characteristics of all genes indicated a continuous evolution of the virus, and substitutions in biologically important motifs warrant future investigations to assess their roles in the pathobiology of the virus. Taken together, this comprehensive analysis of all known avulaviruses ascertains continuous monitoring and surveillance of wild/water-fowls and commercial poultry. These findings further our understanding on the evolutionary dynamics and potential emergence of novel avulaviruses and will establish bases to identify potential of wild-bird origin apathogenic viruses to cause infections in commercial poultry.
禽呼肠孤病毒(Avian reoviruses,ARVs)可感染全世界范围广泛的禽类,具有不同的临床结果和经济影响。由于宿主谱广泛,从野生和家养鸟类中不断报道新型呼肠孤病毒,这突显了病毒在易感种群中进化、适应和出现的潜力。已经对个别呼肠孤病毒的病理生物学和系统发育特征进行了研究,然而,对呼肠孤病毒的综合和比较评估仍然难以实现。为了评估新型呼肠孤病毒的进化动态和潜在出现,我们丰富了所有已知呼肠孤病毒(种型 1-20)的现有数据库,并根据完整基因组和单个完整基因确定了它们的基因组特征。虽然呼肠孤病毒之间的核苷酸差异很大(高达 65.4%),但系统基因组分析显示,所有呼肠孤病毒分为三个不同的分支。主要分支(I 分支)包括最古老和最新的呼肠孤病毒(2、5、6、7、8、10、11、14、15 和 20),第二个分支(II 分支)由呼肠孤病毒 1、9、12、13、16、17、18 和 19 组成,而第三个分支(III 分支)仅携带呼肠孤病毒 3 和 4。有趣的是,聚类模式在基于单个基因的分析中具有描述性,然而,血凝素神经氨酸酶(HN)和聚合酶(L)基因显示出与完整基因组聚类相似的清晰离散分支模式。因此,我们建议使用 HN 或 L 基因或完整基因组来研究呼肠孤病毒的流行病学方面。所有基因的基因组和残基特征表明病毒的连续进化,并且在生物学上重要的基序中的替换需要未来的研究来评估它们在病毒病理学中的作用。综上所述,对所有已知呼肠孤病毒的综合分析确定了对野生/水禽和商业家禽的持续监测和监测。这些发现进一步加深了我们对新型呼肠孤病毒进化动态和潜在出现的理解,并为识别野生鸟类起源的无致病性病毒在商业家禽中引起感染的潜力奠定了基础。