Department of Pathobiological Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, Portland, Oregon, USA.
J Virol. 2023 May 31;97(5):e0019623. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00196-23. Epub 2023 May 8.
Viruses in the family display remarkable genomic variation and ecological diversity. This plasticity occurs despite the fact that, as negative sense RNA viruses, rhabdoviruses rarely if ever recombine. Here, we describe nonrecombinatorial evolutionary processes leading to genomic diversification in the inferred from two novel rhabdoviruses of freshwater mussels (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Unionida). Killamcar virus 1 (KILLV-1) from a plain pocketbook () is closely related phylogenetically and transcriptionally to finfish-infecting viruses in the subfamily . KILLV-1 offers a novel example of glycoprotein gene duplication, differing from previous examples in that the paralogs overlap. Evolutionary analyses reveal a clear pattern of relaxed selection due to subfunctionalization in rhabdoviral glycoprotein paralogs, which has not previously been described in RNA viruses. Chemarfal virus 1 (CHMFV-1) from a western pearlshell () is closely related phylogenetically and transcriptionally to viruses in the genus , the sole recognized genus in the subfamily , representing the first known gammarhabdovirus of a host other than finfish. The CHMFV-1 G-L noncoding region contains a nontranscribed remnant gene of precisely the same length as the NV gene of most novirhabdoviruses, offering a compelling example of pseudogenization. The unique reproductive strategy of freshwater mussels involves an obligate parasitic stage in which larvae encyst in the tissues of finfish, offering a plausible ecological mechanism for viral host-switching. Viruses in the family infect a variety of hosts, including vertebrates, invertebrates, plants and fungi, with important consequences for health and agriculture. This study describes two newly discovered viruses of freshwater mussels from the United States. One virus from a plain pocketbook () is closely related to fish-infecting viruses in the subfamily . The other virus from a western pearlshell () is closely related to viruses in the subfamily , which until now were only known to infect finfish. Genome features of both viruses provide new evidence of how rhabdoviruses evolved their extraordinary variability. Freshwater mussel larvae attach to fish and feed on tissues and blood, which may explain how rhabdoviruses originally jumped between mussels and fish. The significance of this research is that it improves our understanding of rhabdovirus ecology and evolution, shedding new light on these important viruses and the diseases they cause.
科的病毒表现出显著的基因组变异和生态多样性。尽管作为负义 RNA 病毒,弹状病毒很少发生重组,但这种可塑性仍然存在。在这里,我们描述了导致从两种淡水贻贝(软体动物:双壳纲:贻贝目)的新型弹状病毒推断的基因组多样化的非重组进化过程。来自平原钱包贝()的基拉马卡病毒 1(KILLV-1)在系统发育和转录上与亚科中感染鱼类的病毒密切相关。KILLV-1 提供了糖蛋白基因复制的新例子,与以前的例子不同的是,这些旁系同源物重叠。进化分析揭示了由于弹状病毒糖蛋白旁系同源物的亚功能化而导致的选择放松的明显模式,这在 RNA 病毒中尚未被描述。来自西方珍珠贝()的切马尔法尔病毒 1(CHMFV-1)在系统发育和转录上与属的病毒密切相关,属是该亚科中唯一公认的属,代表了除鱼类以外的宿主的第一个已知的 gammarhabdovirus。CHMFV-1 的 G-L 非编码区包含一个非转录的残余基因,其长度与大多数新型弹状病毒的 NV 基因完全相同,这是一种令人信服的假基因化例子。淡水贻贝独特的繁殖策略涉及幼虫在鱼类组织中形成包囊的强制性寄生阶段,这为病毒的宿主转换提供了一种合理的生态机制。科的病毒感染包括脊椎动物、无脊椎动物、植物和真菌在内的多种宿主,对健康和农业有重要影响。本研究描述了来自美国的两种新发现的淡水贻贝病毒。一种来自平原钱包贝()的病毒与亚科中感染鱼类的病毒密切相关。另一种来自西方珍珠贝()的病毒与亚科中的病毒密切相关,而直到现在,这些病毒只被知感染鱼类。两种病毒的基因组特征为研究弹状病毒如何进化出它们非凡的变异性提供了新的证据。贻贝幼虫附着在鱼类上,并以组织和血液为食,这可能解释了弹状病毒最初是如何在贻贝和鱼类之间跳跃的。这项研究的意义在于,它提高了我们对弹状病毒生态学和进化的理解,为这些重要的病毒及其引起的疾病提供了新的认识。