Miller Allison K, Mifsud Jonathon C O, Costa Vincenzo A, Grimwood Rebecca M, Kitson Jane, Baker Cindy, Brosnahan Cara L, Pande Anjali, Holmes Edward C, Gemmell Neil J, Geoghegan Jemma L
Department of Anatomy, University of Otago, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand.
Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity, School of Life and Environmental Sciences and School of Medical Sciences, Johns Hopkins Drive, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
Virus Evol. 2021 May 31;7(2):veab050. doi: 10.1093/ve/veab050. eCollection 2021.
The comprise a genetically diverse group of positive-sense single-stranded RNA virus families that infect a range of invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. Recent metagenomic studies have identified nido-like virus sequences, particularly those related to the , in a range of aquatic hosts including fish, amphibians, and reptiles. We sought to identify additional members of the in both bony and jawless fish through a combination of total RNA sequencing (meta-transcriptomics) and data mining of published RNA sequencing data and from this reveal more of the long-term patterns and processes of coronavirus evolution. Accordingly, we identified a number of divergent viruses that fell within the subfamily of the , including those in a jawless fish-the pouched lamprey. By mining fish transcriptome data, we identified additional virus transcripts matching these viruses in bony fish from both marine and freshwater environments. These new viruses retained sequence conservation in the RNA-dependant RNA polymerase across the but formed a distinct and diverse phylogenetic group. Although there are broad-scale topological similarities between the phylogenies of the major groups of coronaviruses and their vertebrate hosts, the evolutionary relationship of viruses within the does not mirror that of their hosts. For example, the coronavirus found in the pouched lamprey fell within the phylogenetic diversity of bony fish letoviruses, indicative of past host switching events. Hence, despite possessing a phylogenetic history that likely spans the entire history of the vertebrates, coronavirus evolution has been characterised by relatively frequent cross-species transmission, particularly in hosts that reside in aquatic habitats.
它们包括一组基因多样的正链单链RNA病毒科,可感染一系列无脊椎动物和脊椎动物宿主。最近的宏基因组学研究在包括鱼类、两栖动物和爬行动物在内的一系列水生宿主中发现了类巢病毒序列,特别是那些与[具体病毒名称未给出]相关的序列。我们试图通过全RNA测序(元转录组学)以及对已发表的RNA测序数据进行数据挖掘,在硬骨鱼和无颌鱼中鉴定出[具体病毒名称未给出]的其他成员,并由此揭示冠状病毒进化的更多长期模式和过程。因此,我们鉴定出了一些属于[具体病毒名称未给出]亚科的不同病毒,包括在一种无颌鱼——袋形七鳃鳗中发现的病毒。通过挖掘鱼类转录组数据,我们在来自海洋和淡水环境的硬骨鱼中鉴定出了与这些病毒匹配的其他病毒转录本。这些新病毒在整个[具体病毒名称未给出]中,其依赖RNA的RNA聚合酶中保留了序列保守性,但形成了一个独特且多样的系统发育群体。尽管冠状病毒主要群体的系统发育与其脊椎动物宿主之间存在广泛的拓扑相似性,但[具体病毒名称未给出]内病毒的进化关系并不反映其宿主的进化关系。例如,在袋形七鳃鳗中发现的冠状病毒属于硬骨鱼勒托病毒的系统发育多样性范围内,这表明过去发生过宿主转换事件。因此,尽管冠状病毒的系统发育历史可能跨越了脊椎动物的整个历史,但冠状病毒的进化特征是相对频繁的跨物种传播,特别是在栖息于水生栖息地的宿主中。