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Shared common ancestry of rodent alphacoronaviruses sampled globally

Authors :
Tsoleridis, Theocharis
Chappell, Joseph G
Onianwa, Okechukwu
Marston, Denise A
Fooks, Anthony R
Monchatre?leroy, Elodie
Drexler, Jan F
Drosten, Christian
Tarlinton, Rachael E
Mcclure, Charles P
Holmes, Edward C
K 7 Ball, Jonathan
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
MDPI, 2019.

Abstract

The recent discovery of novel alphacoronaviruses (alpha-CoVs) in European and Asian rodents revealed that rodent coronaviruses (CoVs) sampled worldwide formed a discrete phylogenetic group within this genus. To determine the evolutionary history of rodent CoVs in more detail, particularly the relative frequencies of virus-host co-divergence and cross-species transmission, we recovered longer fragments of CoV genomes from previously discovered European rodent alpha-CoVs using a combination of PCR and high-throughput sequencing. Accordingly, the full genome sequence was retrieved from the UK rat coronavirus, along with partial genome sequences from the UK field vole and Poland-resident bank vole CoVs, and a short conserved ORF1b fragment from the French rabbit CoV. Genome and phylogenetic analysis showed that despite their diverse geographic origins, all rodent alpha-CoVs formed a single monophyletic group and shared similar features such as the same gene constellations, a recombinant beta-CoV spike gene, and similar core transcriptional regulatory sequences (TRS). These data suggest that all rodent alpha CoVs sampled so far originate from a single common ancestor, and that there has likely been a long-term association between alpha CoVs and rodents. Despite this likely antiquity, the phylogenetic pattern of the alpha-CoVs was also suggestive of relatively frequent host-jumping among the different rodent species.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994915
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....9002dd53556c2e039d0d0a0762ff4980