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Murine and related chapparvoviruses are nephro-tropic and produce novel accessory proteins in infected kidneys

Authors :
Qiu, J
Lee, Q
Padula, MP
Pinello, N
Williams, SH
O'Rourke, MB
Fumagalli, MJ
Orkin, JD
Song, R
Shaban, B
Brenner, O
Pimanda, JE
Weninger, W
de Souza, WM
Melin, AD
Wong, JJ-L
Crim, MJ
Monette, S
Roediger, B
Jolly, CJ
Qiu, J
Lee, Q
Padula, MP
Pinello, N
Williams, SH
O'Rourke, MB
Fumagalli, MJ
Orkin, JD
Song, R
Shaban, B
Brenner, O
Pimanda, JE
Weninger, W
de Souza, WM
Melin, AD
Wong, JJ-L
Crim, MJ
Monette, S
Roediger, B
Jolly, CJ
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Mouse kidney parvovirus (MKPV) is a member of the provisional genus Chapparvovirus that causes renal disease in immune-compromised mice, with a disease course reminiscent of polyomavirus-associated nephropathy in immune-suppressed kidney transplant patients. Here we map four major MKPV transcripts, created by alternative splicing, to a common initiator region, and use mass spectrometry to identify "p10" and "p15" as novel chapparvovirus accessory proteins produced in MKPV-infected kidneys. p15 and the splicing-dependent putative accessory protein NS2 are conserved in all near-complete amniote chapparvovirus genomes currently available (from mammals, birds and a reptile). In contrast, p10 may be encoded only by viruses with >60% amino acid identity to MKPV. We show that MKPV is kidney-tropic and that the bat chapparvovirus DrPV-1 and a non-human primate chapparvovirus, CKPV, are also found in the kidneys of their hosts. We propose, therefore, that many mammal chapparvoviruses are likely to be nephrotropic.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315715019
Document Type :
Electronic Resource