Back to Search
Start Over
First isolation of West Nile virus from a dromedary camel.
- Source :
-
Emerging microbes & infections [Emerg Microbes Infect] 2016 Jun 08; Vol. 5, pp. e53. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jun 08. - Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Although antibodies against West Nile virus (WNV) have been detected in the sera of dromedaries in the Middle East, North Africa and Spain, no WNV has been isolated or amplified from dromedary or Bactrian camels. In this study, WNV was isolated from Vero cells inoculated with both nasal swab and pooled trachea/lung samples from a dromedary calf in Dubai. Complete-genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis using the near-whole-genome polyprotein revealed that the virus belonged to lineage 1a. There was no clustering of the present WNV with other WNVs isolated in other parts of the Middle East. Within lineage 1a, the dromedary WNV occupied a unique position, although it was most closely related to other WNVs of cluster 2. Comparative analysis revealed that the putative E protein encoded by the genome possessed the original WNV E protein glycosylation motif NYS at E154-156, which contained the N-linked glycosylation site at N-154 associated with increased WNV pathogenicity and neuroinvasiveness. In the putative NS1 protein, the A70S substitution observed in other cluster 2 WNVs and P250, which has been implicated in neuroinvasiveness, were present. In addition, the foo motif in the putative NS2A protein, which has been implicated in neuroinvasiveness, was detected. Notably, the amino-acid residues at 14 positions in the present dromedary WNV genome differed from those in most of the closely related WNV strains in cluster 2 of lineage 1a, with the majority of these differences observed in the putative E and NS5 proteins. The present study is the first to demonstrate the isolation of WNV from dromedaries. This finding expands the possible reservoirs of WNV and sources of WNV infection.
- Subjects :
- Africa, Northern epidemiology
Animals
Chlorocebus aethiops
Genome, Viral
Glycosylation
Lung virology
Middle East epidemiology
Nose virology
Phylogeny
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Vero Cells
Viral Nonstructural Proteins genetics
West Nile Fever epidemiology
West Nile virus pathogenicity
Camelus virology
Disease Reservoirs veterinary
West Nile Fever veterinary
West Nile virus genetics
West Nile virus isolation & purification
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2222-1751
- Volume :
- 5
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Emerging microbes & infections
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 27273223
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/emi.2016.53