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Sequencing of Historical Isolates, K-mer Mining and High Serological Cross-Reactivity with Ross River Virus Argue against the Presence of Getah Virus in Australia

Authors :
Kexin Yan
Andrii Slonchak
Wilson Nguyen
Alexander A. Khromykh
Bing Tang
Viviana P. Lutzky
Rhys Parry
Daniel J. Rawle
Troy Dumenil
Thuy T. Le
Andreas Suhrbier
David Warrilow
Source :
Pathogens, Volume 9, Issue 10, Pathogens, Vol 9, Iss 848, p 848 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Getah virus (GETV) is a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus primarily associated with disease in horses and pigs in Asia. GETV was also reported to have been isolated from mosquitoes in Australia in 1961<br />however, retrieval and sequencing of the original isolates (N544 and N554), illustrated that these viruses were virtually identical to the 1955 GETVMM2021 isolate from Malaysia. K-mer mining of the &gt<br />40,000 terabases of sequence data in the Sequence Read Archive followed by BLASTn confirmation identified multiple GETV sequences in biosamples from Asia (often as contaminants), but not in biosamples from Australia. In contrast, sequence reads aligning to the Australian Ross River virus (RRV) were readily identified in Australian biosamples. To explore the serological relationship between GETV and other alphaviruses, an adult wild-type mouse model of GETV was established. High levels of cross-reactivity and cross-protection were evident for convalescent sera from mice infected with GETV or RRV, highlighting the difficulties associated with the interpretation of early serosurveys reporting GETV antibodies in Australian cattle and pigs. The evidence that GETV circulates in Australia is thus not compelling.

Details

ISSN :
20760817
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pathogens
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....672beaf446c4fcfa95f076712892ea2f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9100848