Department of Medical Entomology, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-8640, Japan.
Management Department of Biosafety, Laboratory Animal, and Pathogen Bank, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-8640, Japan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 May 7;121(19):e2319400121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2319400121. Epub 2024 Apr 30.
During their blood-feeding process, ticks are known to transmit various viruses to vertebrates, including humans. Recent viral metagenomic analyses using next-generation sequencing (NGS) have revealed that blood-feeding arthropods like ticks harbor a large diversity of viruses. However, many of these viruses have not been isolated or cultured, and their basic characteristics remain unknown. This study aimed to present the identification of a difficult-to-culture virus in ticks using NGS and to understand its epidemic dynamics using molecular biology techniques. During routine tick-borne virus surveillance in Japan, an unknown flaviviral sequence was detected via virome analysis of host-questing ticks. Similar viral sequences have been detected in the sera of sika deer and wild boars in Japan, and this virus was tentatively named the Saruyama virus (SAYAV). Because SAYAV did not propagate in any cultured cells tested, single-round infectious virus particles (SRIP) were generated based on its structural protein gene sequence utilizing a yellow fever virus-based replicon system to understand its nationwide endemic status. Seroepidemiological studies using SRIP as antigens have demonstrated the presence of neutralizing antibodies against SAYAV in sika deer and wild boar captured at several locations in Japan, suggesting that SAYAV is endemic throughout Japan. Phylogenetic analyses have revealed that SAYAV forms a sister clade with the genus, which includes important mosquito- and tick-borne pathogenic viruses. This shows that SAYAV evolved into a lineage independent of the known orthoflaviviruses. This study demonstrates a unique approach for understanding the epidemiology of uncultured viruses by combining viral metagenomics and pseudoinfectious viral particles.
在吸血过程中,蜱虫已知会将各种病毒传播给脊椎动物,包括人类。最近使用下一代测序(NGS)的病毒宏基因组分析表明,像蜱虫这样的吸血节肢动物携带大量多样的病毒。然而,许多这些病毒尚未被分离或培养,其基本特征仍然未知。本研究旨在使用 NGS 鉴定蜱虫中难以培养的病毒,并使用分子生物学技术了解其流行动态。在日本常规的蜱传病毒监测中,通过对宿主寄生蜱的病毒组分析,检测到一种未知的黄病毒序列。在日本的梅花鹿和野猪血清中也检测到了类似的病毒序列,该病毒被暂时命名为 Saruyama 病毒(SAYAV)。由于 SAYAV 不能在任何测试的培养细胞中繁殖,因此根据其结构蛋白基因序列利用黄热病病毒复制子系统生成单轮感染性病毒颗粒(SRIP),以了解其全国流行状态。使用 SRIP 作为抗原的血清流行病学研究表明,在日本多个地点捕获的梅花鹿和野猪中存在针对 SAYAV 的中和抗体,表明 SAYAV 在日本各地流行。系统发育分析表明,SAYAV 与包括重要的蚊媒和蜱传致病性病毒的属形成姐妹分支。这表明 SAYAV 是从已知的正黄病毒系独立进化而来的。本研究通过病毒宏基因组学和假感染性病毒颗粒相结合,展示了一种独特的方法来了解未培养病毒的流行病学。