151. Host switch during evolution of a genetically distinct hantavirus in the American shrew mole (Neurotrichus gibbsii)
- Author
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Satoru Arai, Laurie Dizney, Hae Ji Kang, Laarni Sumibcay, Jin Won Song, Luis A. Ruedas, Richard Yanagihara, and Shannon N. Bennett
- Subjects
Genetics ,Orthohantavirus ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,viruses ,Shrew ,Urotrichus talpoides ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,Biological Evolution ,DNA sequencing ,Article ,Moles ,Oregon ,Phylogenetics ,Evolutionary biology ,Virology ,biology.animal ,American shrew mole ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Animals ,RNA, Viral ,Parallel evolution ,Phylogeny ,Hantavirus - Abstract
A genetically distinct hantavirus, designated Oxbow virus (OXBV), was detected in tissues of an American shrew mole (Neurotrichus gibbsii), captured in Gresham, Oregon, in September 2003. Pairwise analysis of full-length S- and M- and partial L-segment nucleotide and amino acid sequences of OXBV indicated low sequence similarity with rodent-borne hantaviruses. Phylogenetic analyses using maximum-likelihood and Bayesian methods, and host-parasite evolutionary comparisons, showed that OXBV and Asama virus, a hantavirus recently identified from the Japanese shrew mole (Urotrichus talpoides), were related to soricine shrew-borne hantaviruses from North America and Eurasia, respectively, suggesting parallel evolution associated with cross-species transmission.
- Published
- 2009