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Virus nomenclature below the species level: a standardized nomenclature for filovirus strains and variants rescued from cDNA.

Authors :
Kuhn JH
Bào Y
Bavari S
Becker S
Bradfute S
Brauburger K
Rodney Brister J
Bukreyev AA
Caì Y
Chandran K
Davey RA
Dolnik O
Dye JM
Enterlein S
Gonzalez JP
Formenty P
Freiberg AN
Hensley LE
Hoenen T
Honko AN
Ignatyev GM
Jahrling PB
Johnson KM
Klenk HD
Kobinger G
Lackemeyer MG
Leroy EM
Lever MS
Mühlberger E
Netesov SV
Olinger GG
Palacios G
Patterson JL
Paweska JT
Pitt L
Radoshitzky SR
Ryabchikova EI
Saphire EO
Shestopalov AM
Smither SJ
Sullivan NJ
Swanepoel R
Takada A
Towner JS
van der Groen G
Volchkov VE
Volchkova VA
Wahl-Jensen V
Warren TK
Warfield KL
Weidmann M
Nichol ST
Source :
Archives of virology [Arch Virol] 2014 May; Vol. 159 (5), pp. 1229-37. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Nov 05.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Specific alterations (mutations, deletions, insertions) of virus genomes are crucial for the functional characterization of their regulatory elements and their expression products, as well as a prerequisite for the creation of attenuated viruses that could serve as vaccine candidates. Virus genome tailoring can be performed either by using traditionally cloned genomes as starting materials, followed by site-directed mutagenesis, or by de novo synthesis of modified virus genomes or parts thereof. A systematic nomenclature for such recombinant viruses is necessary to set them apart from wild-type and laboratory-adapted viruses, and to improve communication and collaborations among researchers who may want to use recombinant viruses or create novel viruses based on them. A large group of filovirus experts has recently proposed nomenclatures for natural and laboratory animal-adapted filoviruses that aim to simplify the retrieval of sequence data from electronic databases. Here, this work is extended to include nomenclature for filoviruses obtained in the laboratory via reverse genetics systems. The previously developed template for natural filovirus genetic variant naming, <virus name> (<strain>/)<isolation host-suffix>/<country of sampling>/<year of sampling>/<genetic variant designation>-<isolate designation>, is retained, but we propose to adapt the type of information added to each field for cDNA clone-derived filoviruses. For instance, the full-length designation of an Ebola virus Kikwit variant rescued from a plasmid developed at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could be akin to "Ebola virus H.sapiens-rec/COD/1995/Kikwit-abc1" (with the suffix "rec" identifying the recombinant nature of the virus and "abc1" being a placeholder for any meaningful isolate designator). Such a full-length designation should be used in databases and the methods section of publications. Shortened designations (such as "EBOV H.sap/COD/95/Kik-abc1") and abbreviations (such as "EBOV/Kik-abc1") could be used in the remainder of the text, depending on how critical it is to convey information contained in the full-length name. "EBOV" would suffice if only one EBOV strain/variant/isolate is addressed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-8798
Volume :
159
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Archives of virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24190508
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-013-1877-2