Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Disease and Biosecurity, School of Life and Environmental Sciences and School of Medical Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Health and Biosecurity, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Black Mountain, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
J Virol. 2020 May 18;94(11). doi: 10.1128/JVI.02119-19.
Ectoparasites play an important role in virus transmission among vertebrates. Little, however, is known about the nature of those viruses that pass between invertebrates and vertebrates. In Australia, flies and fleas support the mechanical transmission of two viral biological controls against wild rabbits-rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV) and myxoma virus. We compared virome compositions in rabbits and these ectoparasites, sequencing total RNA from multiple tissues and gut contents of wild rabbits, fleas collected from these rabbits, and flies trapped sympatrically. Meta-transcriptomic analyses identified 50 novel viruses from multiple RNA virus families. Rabbits and their ectoparasites were characterized by markedly different viromes, with virus abundance greatest in flies. Although viral contigs from six virus families/groups were found in both rabbits and ectoparasites, they clustered in distinct host-dependent lineages. A novel calicivirus and a picornavirus detected in rabbit cecal content were vertebrate specific; the newly detected calicivirus was distinct from known rabbit caliciviruses, while the picornavirus clustered with sapeloviruses. Several picobirnaviruses were also identified that fell in diverse phylogenetic positions, compatible with the idea that they are associated with bacteria. Further comparative analysis revealed that the remaining viruses found in rabbits, and all those from ectoparasites, were likely associated with invertebrates, plants, and coinfecting endosymbionts. While no full genomes of vertebrate-associated viruses were detected in ectoparasites, small numbers of reads from rabbit astrovirus, RHDV, and other lagoviruses were present in flies. This supports a role for flies in the mechanical transmission of RHDV, while their involvement in astrovirus transmission merits additional exploration. Ectoparasites play an important role in the transmission of many vertebrate-infecting viruses, including Zika and dengue viruses. Although it is becoming increasingly clear that invertebrate species harbor substantial virus diversity, it is unclear how many of the viruses carried by invertebrates have the potential to infect vertebrate species. We used the European rabbit () as a model species to compare virome compositions in a vertebrate host and known associated ectoparasite mechanical vectors, in this case, fleas and blowflies. In particular, we aimed to infer the extent of viral transfer between these distinct types of host. Our analysis revealed that despite extensive viral diversity in both rabbits and associated ectoparasites, and the close interaction of these vertebrate and invertebrate species, biological viral transmission from ectoparasites to vertebrate species is rare. We did, however, find evidence to support the idea of a role of blowflies in transmitting viruses without active replication in the insect.
外寄生虫在脊椎动物之间的病毒传播中起着重要作用。然而,对于在无脊椎动物和脊椎动物之间传播的那些病毒的性质知之甚少。在澳大利亚,苍蝇和跳蚤支持两种病毒生物防治剂在野兔中的机械传播——兔出血症病毒(RHDV)和兔粘液瘤病毒。我们比较了野兔和这些外寄生虫的病毒组组成,对来自野生兔的多种组织和肠道内容物、从这些兔子收集的跳蚤以及共生的苍蝇进行了总 RNA 测序。元转录组分析从多种 RNA 病毒科鉴定了 50 种新病毒。兔子及其外寄生虫的病毒组有明显的不同,病毒丰度在苍蝇中最高。尽管在兔子和外寄生虫中都发现了来自六个病毒科/组的病毒,但它们聚集在不同的、依赖宿主的谱系中。在兔子盲肠内容物中检测到的一种新型杯状病毒和一种小 RNA 病毒是脊椎动物特异性的;新检测到的杯状病毒与已知的兔杯状病毒不同,而小 RNA 病毒与 sapeloviruses 聚类。还鉴定了几种小双 RNA 病毒,它们在不同的系统发育位置上聚类,这与它们与细菌相关的观点一致。进一步的比较分析表明,在兔子中发现的其余病毒,以及所有来自外寄生虫的病毒,可能与无脊椎动物、植物和共生内共生体有关。虽然在外寄生虫中未检测到与脊椎动物相关的病毒的完整基因组,但在苍蝇中存在少量来自兔星状病毒、RHDV 和其他长尾病毒的读段。这支持了苍蝇在 RHDV 的机械传播中的作用,而它们在星状病毒传播中的参与值得进一步探索。外寄生虫在许多感染脊椎动物的病毒传播中起着重要作用,包括寨卡病毒和登革热病毒。尽管越来越清楚的是,无脊椎动物物种具有大量的病毒多样性,但尚不清楚无脊椎动物携带的病毒中有多少具有感染脊椎动物物种的潜力。我们使用欧洲兔(Oryctolagus cuniculus)作为模型物种,比较了脊椎动物宿主和已知相关外寄生虫机械传播媒介(在此情况下为跳蚤和苍蝇)中的病毒组组成。特别是,我们旨在推断这些不同类型宿主之间病毒转移的程度。我们的分析表明,尽管兔子和相关外寄生虫都具有广泛的病毒多样性,并且这些脊椎动物和无脊椎动物物种密切相互作用,但外寄生虫向脊椎动物物种的生物病毒传播很少见。然而,我们确实找到了支持苍蝇在不进行昆虫体内复制的情况下传播病毒的作用的证据。